The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, June 01, 1923, Image 1

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.' ■ 1 nvemtlgate Today! To Regular 8ubaerlbara THE banner-herald J1.000 Accident Policy Free. ATHENS COTTONS MIDDLING I zra PREVIOUS CLOSE 2M Me Oally and Sunday—10 Cant* I Week. Eattllthed 1832. Bell? (Ml Sunday-,10 CenU I VT*rt, . WEATHERS | | Probably Fair and Cooler VOI- 91. NO' 92 Aaioclated Preea Service ATHENS, GA, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1923. A. B, a Paper •Ingle Copies 2 Cents Dally.' S Cents Sunday. I BEING P! Negotiations Between the Chinese Government and Suehow Train Bandits Now in Final Stage. EXPECT release WITHIN A WEEK Thought That All Cap tives Will Be F r e e d in Next Few Days, Allen Talks. (By Aeaoeiatad Praea.. TSACK’HWANO. — NoRutlatione ll)T the release of the 12 remaining foreign captives held by the Sban- luns hanJllH on Paolipkn mountain ire entering their final stage and It in expected that all srlll be free within a week. , ’’ Saturday government officials .III commence re-enllstlng the bandits lo the Chinese army In ,ac. cordance with .the outlaxvs ’d. tmand. A brigand thus will be transformed Into a aoldler for each rifle or revolver turned In by the bandit chief. Father William Lenfers, aged Orman Catholic priest at Llnch- ,nf. has received a cablegram from pope Plus, Instructing him to at- tend to 0. D. Muaao. millionaire Italian attorney of Shanghai and do nil In his poew rto have Muaao released. Major Robert A. Allen, of the United States army medical corps, Manilla, and W. Smith, Slightly built. Kray-haired tourist of Man chester. Ena., the two prisoners of the shantung brigands, released yesterday, had th.tr first real sleet In three weeks at the American re- lift station here Thursday night. this morning Major Allen left fo« Tientsin to rejoin hi* wife, whit. Smith took the train for Pekin. "I left the Paoteuku temple here, with mixed emotlone, glad to. be released, yet full of regret at part, lag with my fellow prisoners, the (input group of men I nave vtwt met/ Mild Smith before he board* td the train. - “The climax of ovt experiencei v.ime Tuesday.* May M* On that day the bandlte communicated to us the ultimatum they had aent out to thp Chlneee authorftiee and re lief work era ‘withdraw the troopi or all the captlvea will be killed.’ Then we all thought the end wai r. All were pale and allent a- heard the ultimatum, hut onf jur group started to alng and the rest Immediately Joined in. The bandltn were dumfounded Their chiefs and rank and file wen daz.«! at the song that arose na a reply to their decision, particularly because of the contrast between out attitude* and that of the Chinese prisoners, who were meek gnd cry Condition Of Cotton In ia Is 65 Per Cm BIG CRIB LIKELY NITIDIL MEETING KEIOF Government Report of Condition on May 25th Issued Friday and Received Here Over Linnel’s Wire. Condition For Entire Country, 71. Condition of the cotton crop'in the United States on May 25 was seventy-one percent, according to the condi tion report issued Friday by the government. The condi tion of the crop in Georgia on that date was sixty-five per cent as against seventy-one in 1922 and sixty-three in 1922 or a ten year average of seventy-two. The report, which follows, was received over F. 3. Linnall and Company’s private market wire: * 10 year State 1923 1922 1921.1920 Aver. Quantity of Vegetables Increased As Season Progresses., Beans Are "Coming in” Now., GRADED PRObuCTS FIND QUICK SALE Captain Beusse Presented With Traveling Cup Given Surprise Party By Teachers and Officers of Presbyterian Church on Eve of European Trip. Captain J. H. Buesse, who leaves Friday night for a 3-month’s Eu ropean tour, waa honored with n surprise party at his home on Prince avenue Thursday night, given by teachers and officers of the First Presbyterian church, and present ed him with a handsome silver traveling cup. Captain ’ Beusse will sail from New York June 7 on the Laconia. He will be accompanied by his son, Thomas Beusse,' a student at the Athena High School. The Itinerary includes Important and InterestiQi towns and cities In Qermuny, Eng land, France and Belgium. The ship will And at Hamburg, Qer- The presentation of the loving cup to Captain Beussa was In recognition of his service to the church aa a deacon and as secre tary and treasurer of the Sunday aahool. The Beusse hoiho on Prince avenue was artistically decorated for the occasion, Mrs. Beuhae hav- Va. — 79 N. C. ... 77 S. C. ... 64 ,84' Cherries and Peaches Also Much in Demand. Market Opens At 7:00 O'clock on Broad Street. 65 71 62 66 Fla, . Ala. . Miss 87 86 60 62 70 75 00 60 Bri-ht aides Frdiay indicated a large crowd at the Curb JJurket Saturday morning. Aa the season progresses mors CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MOVES S TO CHANGE GEORGIA TAXATION AT ROUSING MEETING Members of Local Club j Returns to Athens At; Conclusion of Atlanta Convention. DENVER GETS NEXT MEETING Denver Selected For 1924 Convention. Ohio Man Elected President. At lantan Vice-President. Delegates of the local club to the International Convention of Klwanls clubs, Which closed Thursday nlgbt in Atlanta, return- La. ' 68 70 67 72 Tex. .. Ark. ... Tenn. Mo. .. Okla. . Calif. Art*. .. Olliers. 8. .... 71 77 61 71 60 66 76 70 61 70 79 69 60 54 90 76 . 64 63 67 74 n 93 94 76 86 92 81 84 80 63.6 66 62.4 73.C Acreage planted (7) 1922: 24,852,- 000; 1921: 81,678,000; 1920: 87,048,- Acreage picked (?) 1922 : 33.742.- 000; 1921: 80,509.000; 1920: 36,178,- Crop, lint (?) 1922: 9,729.000; 1921: 7,963,000; 1920: 13,271,000. Sloman Will Filed Here For Probate The will of the late S. Sloman baa been (lied with Ordinary A: C. Orr, for probate. Mrs. Sophia My ers, Aaron Cohen end Howell C. vegetables are being brought Intol***J® and will make n the city. Last Tuesday a largdlP 01 * ot the convention to tho local amount of new Irish potatoes ware I club at tho regular luncheon next sold on the m&rket and it is «c-1 Thursday. • ted that beans, in larger quan-i Following election of officers for pected that beans, in larger quan-i remowing election ot oincera tor titles, will find their way to the the next year, selection of Denver. ' “ ' Colo., aa the 1(24 convention city market Saturday. Cherries and peaches an coming in and find a ready sale. Straw berries have about disappeared although two or three producers continue to bring them In end ex perience no trouble in diepoeing of them. Many Athens women .went. Thursday night the gnat bulk of [“I®?,® to preserve strawberriesi Mid buy U, 0 6,000 delegates and visitors I mentor «««!_ gallon. each week for thst hosrdod their spec... trains and ». S^owa^nSd hStTtto aslant I P rie "‘ "•e“ re<1 W* nvolver and sn. fsLmnlie*s? m A-ill tha church wben'he says he fjfcdmand F. Arne, °* ^"5"?““; 1 wound the youth with two boxee Tarjiii’jtj I^ ui i ,or the poor containing a email wesldcnt. to succeed George H. amount of money, in his bends. R >'n’iinl« T n 0 ii Irien.itv hnnnwiv hv • Hb w “ eonductlng the lad fnm Ihn "u!!li^i y r' h0 ir^S- ,b “ church to the parish hones S® He /, °f vrhen the boy made a bnek for *J* mSUsSSf- b ' f 1 1 freedom. When the boy ran. the It is interesting to note change In the condition of . ducts bnught to Athens since tho establishment of the Curb Mar ket. Formerly most of the food crops bnught to Athene wen r ‘ •elected and neatly packed a therefore could not commend good, price. Since the Curb Market began operation many farmer* have learned from their neighbon who Erwin are executor*. The will waa 'always bnught graded proddee that they Sloman and the above wen named In .case X Vw^tha.o “Hopeless Cases” Rapidly Cured With New Drug lng. “From that moment our moral* Improved.. We organised our cami that each man had special dutlpc to perform and koep his time oc cupied. , . "We have not the words to ex- prFH* our gratitude to the relief iniMlon that has supplied our wantt »nd satisfied our whJma. The daily •rrival of the bearers from the re lief camps vu tt,' big event in our hilltop prison. 1 * . WORRIED, HE SAYS Col. Gantt Interviews D. C. Alford, Hartwell Bus iness Man. Hart County Making Fine Progress. (BY T. LARRY GANTT.) Wednesday morning it waa my K 1 * to meet at the Georgian Ait D i £• AWord of Hartwell. Mr. Alford M one of .the leading and £»« pnblic-apirited eitlxcna of hit ft *1? *«•(•. He ia preaidant ? t . he Bank of Hartwell and a «*mU.r of tho board of county "ramissionen, and ia ever found in (“refront in whatever tende to * Advancement and upbuilding of “ town . county and state. 5« «EEN BORSK TIMES tten ■ <ll! “' ua * , ng the unfavorable P proepects now upon the court- A , Va'" K ,f°. e,tc «lve rainfall, Me. now " ld ,uch Urnes “ »™ W.^","**® P“‘ troubles. He th’/ ,r "®«* conditions upon ine f , u . nt fy than wa are now hav- Z "* had for yean been buy- f„L tun and hee known fermera !*T_!*»* at less I 'Z' ,. yt V w,t h empty garnen .nHH <hd the piteous “••""R«teW,7o v u e ur. (Turn to page »ix ) Actual Examples of Value of Treatment Cited By Psychiatric Specialists. MADISON WIs.—More than a year ago a young iima to be known in this story aa John Jones owned all the airplanes in the world, 600,00C taxicabs and the Wisconsin Psy chiatric institute, where he was ex pected to die within two months Doctors tried a new treatment on John Jones and three months latei he was playing baseball. Now h« la earning f60 a week as a carpen- SttYvl' «dbt(f£ No Inventory was filled to show the extent of the estate left, .and outside of several specific t enuest* the residue goes to th chllirn of Mrs.* Sloman, Mrs. 8srsh Cohei) of Athens. Mrs. Sophia Myera of Ath ens. Mrs. Nellie Sbaloski of Nbw York, Jacob 8tern of New v 0 k, and Mrs. Honoris Myers of AU-, gusto. Special bequests were made to Edward Cohen, Miss Susie Cohen, Joseph Sloman, a brother of New York, Joe Myers and Charles Skolowskl of New York. ityrs. Sloman was to have reived the residue of the estate had she outlived Mr. 81omsn. ter. A fellow Inmate wap given to rip* ping down electric fixtures and breaking up furniture. He was ex pected to live In his straight-jacket Just about two months until ' he was given the same treatment that Jones took. Now he is also out lr the world making a living again. These are two actual 1 examples of the benefits of the new tnrparsamld treatment of paresis, announcement of the success of which has attract ed the moat widespread Interest among physicians of the United States and other countries. Thousands of “hopelevV* com** In Insane asylums and hospitals can be returned to normal lire And work In the same manner, according to Dr. A. 8. Lovenhart, of the Uni* verslty of Wlaconsln, one dt the dlscoverlea of the Lorenx-Loven- hart-Blackwenn-Hodges treatment, who declares that 25 ppr cent of asylum inmates lost their mentali ty through pareeis or other form* of “neuro syphilis.” A hundred "hopeless calet” treat ed at the Wlaconeln Psychiatric In stitute 160 more at the Chicago Health Institute and similar num bers at the Msyo Brothers’. cllnle and Johns Hopkins university have been greatly benefited by the treatment, and in about half these Instances the patienty have recov ered their full health »nd been able w,,h H BEGUN IT L. C. I. Large Number of Alum nae Will Attend Exer cises This Year. Dra matic Play Saturday Exercises conducted by the Mary Ann Lipscomb Elementary School Friday morning began the Lucy Cobb commencement of 1922. The commencement exercises this year promise to be attended by a large number of alumnae of the in stitution and a big meeting of the Alumnae Association will be held next Monday at which time the one hundredth anniversary of the General T. R. R. Cobb, founder of the famous school will be observed ' Pleasant A. Stovall, Marlon Jack- son, Philip Weltner and John Clark will be among the speakert St the meeting. Saturday night the Dramatic Club, under the direction of Mias Anne Puryear Wright of the De partment of Spoken English, will present Tennyson’s "Princess” in the out-of-door theatre on the Lucy Cobb campus. The Dramatic Club will be ■•Misted by pupils of Class of 1878 to Hold Reunion Manx of tile classes of the Uni versity of Oeorgle will hold re unions Ik Athens this year. The class of 1878 will hold Its first reunion, forty-fifth anniver sary. Hon. T. 8. Mell Is president of the class and Col. M. O. Michael secretary. Invitations have^ heep aent put in all member*,and.IJ.fe attend th!*. thelf .Tlfflt reunion since leasing college, .t. i8 _ articles -offered Wi a- sale. One man declared n few") j.i _.iys ago tho Curb Market has proved in a short while what the Agricultural -College has been "preaching for fifteen yoais" r the necessity of grading products and packing them neatly- It I* possible that several ex press shipments of cabbage will be made from Athena within the next few days. Although the aurplui is not great enough to ship a ca* load County Agent J. W. Furor and Mrs. Bessie Troutman, market master, are making arrangements to abip several thousand head. Tho cabbage crop this year around Athens is fine and the vcgetahlo brought to the Curb Market la I GENERAL HINES WILL BE ONE OF NOTED MEN TO SPEAK AT LEGION CONVENTION JULY 4 Catholic Priest Shoots Boy For Robbing Church PriestCatches Youth Rob bing Poor Boxes in the Church. Pistol Foils At tempted Escape. v (By Associated Prata.) DETROIT.-r-Rav. Father Michael O. Eaper, pastor of the 8L Soul- face Catholic church, early Friday morning shot and wounded Harold Smith, a fourteen year old boy of Sudbury, as the boy made ■ dash for liberty after he Is alleged , to have been caught robbing the poor boxee of the church. f .Hfntinn.i ‘ Tho prieel told the police that ho eaAHHt’nrinn^'rTi!!!!h" w ** awakened In the early houre constitution of the organisation the mo rnlng by the ringing of seventh annual convention came to „ ” hI T ‘ Dy Th.. passing of n number ot resolu tions and tho creation of a con-1 . .in.,, t,, a bell, which waa so arranged that • £i 0,e Thursday afternoon. „ w m , 0 und whenever anyone “Something Doing Every Minute,” Is the Slogan Adopted By Convention Committee. Big Amuse ment Program. "Something doing every minute." Thefe the elogtn that the Allen R. Fleming Poet of the American Logion of Athena has adopted for tho etato convention of tho depart ment of Georgia that me-'te here July 8, 4. 6. For eeverel weeks now tho en tertainment and program commit tees have been working with State Commander Rodney Cbhen of Au gusta and hla staff on the dotalla of the contention and Athene and the local coat are planning the largeat and moat inl^resting con tention ever held in the Legion la Georgia. • Working In collaboraUon with the Allen R. Fleming Poat ia the Auxiliary, heads* by Mre. Ham mond Johnson, end the women of thte orainluUon ere preparing to entertain the women delegatee and vlaltore royally while here. Must Amend Existing System If Educational Institutions Get Appro priations Sufficient to Live. COMMITTEE WILL WORK OUT PLAN Bill Will Be Introduced in Next Legislature Pro viding For State Consti tutional Amendment. Concerted action on the part of all civlv organizations in Georgia In an effort to provide for amend ment of the state constitution changing tiio existing taxation sys tem In Georgia will bo sought by tho Athens Chamber of Commerce following a rousing meeting Thurs day night Tho meeting Thtfrsday night was the second of a series of Forum meetings planned by tho chamber of Commerce in the interests of : Greater Athens by lending aid t tho educational and Jndustrail e terprises located here. After discussion of the needs of tho educational institutions it was agreed that tho tax system must bo changed to get more revenue July the Fourth will be tho main«and tho first stop to be taken is entertainment day of the conven- to urge all civic bodies in tho state tlon and a program similar to the* to assist-in securing passage of a one put on here last year by the poat will be duplicated. GENERAL HINES WILL 8PEAK ,,i. n n.n.iJ&ni i 1 rveiiviu. niivu iiiu uuj rails mis ISnSn wi«M V I ,,,n "fleet fired et him, the bullet Oenerel Frank T. Hines, bead of .1 ervere Y ihitting him In the arm and knock- (the Veterans Bureau, an orgsnlxa- mg him down. The prieet then *l«n thst the Legion la muchly In. " um “ oned the P°»« «"> lurried itere.tsd In, he* accepted an In. .opponent for the presidency by 390 t j, e yo,,^ 0Vflr ^ them. i vltatlon to. be the guest of the vote., the final count "bowing 794 M convention and deliver the main for Arraa against 414 tor EIwoodl _! _ address ot the day on July 4th. <n«nnrfll Tflnua' tvlll Ixv in J. Turner, of Cheoter, Pa. Douglas who J. Scott, of Winnipeg. Manitoba. ^Wenty-Eight Get ^.TrenoiSn'nd'Tt’he^f'toreooS much attention to the was chosen sreoud vice president. and George R Snell, of Butte, Went; tMrt-rice president. 'International Treasurer Bussell E. Went waa re-eleetM without op.' position. ‘ Four new International' trustees were elected. They are John' R Maas, of iMIhyaukee. ex-Chalrman of tho board of district governors; "■ ;sUe Henry,, pf Pnsndena, Calif. nvurys, v* i unsucuu, vain.. jer second vice president; H. Valter Olll. of Atlantic city; and L f. Whlto. of Morgantown, W. Va. THIRTEEN ON BOARD The hoard of International trus In Month of May Nineteen White Couples and Nine Colored Grant> . ed Licenses During the Month of May. rery attractive. Cabbage finds s each convention and the president, ready sale on the Curb Market. Immediate put president, first and • The number of chickens brought' to tha market ia Increasing each day. Last Tuesday about sixty- five chickens wore brought from Oconee county where the farmer* have organized a Co-operative Poultry Aaeociation. Turnips, turnip aalad. Irish po tatoes. onions, English peas, hams, eggs, butter and other produce Is found on the market at reaaonable prices. The price Hat for Saturday ■a on the Banner-nermld market page today. The market ia Broad stree Elks to Initiate Large Class At Meeting Friday tees of 'Klwanls consists of 13 i*™l years ago but compered to th. members. Eight are elected for two months of tha Immediate peat It I year terms, four being chosen at aboul average. second, vice presidents and treaq urer sqrve ex-nfflclo. The constitutional conrentlon, which wee formed on a resolution Introduced by It. A. Mansfield Hobbs, attorn*, of New York and chalrman of the International com mittee on laws and regulations waa empowered to elt throughout the year and work ont a,revision bf tho Klwanls ronstttutldn, to be presented to the 1824 convention In Denver, The conrentlon will h* formed hr tho president end el’ pest presidents, the chairmen of the board of district governors and alt naat chairmen. ! Throe were 1.42* voting dnle.’ gates at the convention, conslsttne of 39 delegates at lane and 1.337 rlnh delegates and other visltlhfc Ktwantana totaled 4.000 white there ware ntmmxtmstelr 2.000 others l|-k » .11 Ox." _ Including wires and visitors, who LslT. sJcIrrcU OltlS did not regleter et till. f i. ’ UI.J i two of the best amateur baseball Licenses to yved teams In tho stnto Win meet ot, Sanford Field. This will bo follow ed by dnyllght fireworks and' a dance that night. It Is also planned to ponvert out of the main business squares or tho City miff n "Paris Boulevard," Serving .here, in regular 'Vie Parfstenne’' style,, such dehedta- blo "substitutes” ns Coca-Cola, punch; Cboro.CoM. Budwlne. sand, wlches and other American "vln rouges” of the present day. Commander Henry West of th® local post has assembled a com mittee of workers to put over tho convention and Athena, the seat of the State University, the Agri cultural College, the Lumpkin Law School, the State Normal School. Lucy Cobb luetltute end last but not least the University Summer School with Its 2000 attendants, mostly glrla and which will be In session, la going to leave nothing aeAired marlags license during th* month uf May. Thta number I. .mall oon- slderfng the same month of a.v Nineteen whit* couple, ■ring tl Only nine colored coup!,, recur,d llcn.es during the month. On tha white docket at Judge Orr’a attic* ere th* following: Lloyd W. Mile* end Lottie P Bailey, R. A. William, and Beulah B. Chance, Paul B. Mann and Nina H yw* Daria.^troM. thane. «• j , # h n . d0 “ l ®^T entertaining bill in tho legislature calling for i vote next year on a constitutional amendment. This must be done b«- oro tho tax system (fan be changed. A committee from tho Chamber of Commerco will confer with Dr. J. H. T. McPherson, professor of history and political economy at the'Uni versity and tax expert, for the pur pose of framing such a bill. Harry Hodgson actod as chair men of tho Forum, which was called by President White primari ly for tho discussion of plans securing adequute appropriations for the University and Its branch es located In Athens. v Dri Jare l.\f. Pound, president of the State Normal School, was the principal speaker, who told of tho needs of that Institution. He stated that tho economy program adopted two'years ago by the Lerfnlnture- Con archer, Raymond Shaw end Jessie wmiapts. D, R Powell and! w, '? n t 5*.,*"i ,ln *** * p »»>®na are Cor. a«n. Wh.Ich.l, Qrover Moor | or l ® r th " ,> Jl 1 1 l 1 •>• “.“(“ ridel. awlm and sual. W.ltoa, Lawren*. Moor. «»'(■ - Arere.9*. A.reg.ia v t\ u,. ceDtlons. dances, theatres am and Ann.tt* Arnold, J. D/ Stance) i ^*“5*** ‘heatrpa and tho and Annie Norris. Italph Bray and for ontertalnmenL , Bate., R, Cora Marrow, Thomaa Barrow and Clara Walker, John'Bentley and Ruby Summers, Arthur XT: Hartley and Berele Jackaon, John Smith and Lou Oar lend, William Dover and Maud Beck, John B. Power and Willi* Lou Anthony. Cbae. 21. Kit tle and Jew.lt Smith. Delegate, and visitors from every post In' the state are ex pected end every ox-eervtoy men In th* state Is Invited here that week. The complete program la al most ready and tho one- Idea. "ilnmofhlnr ftnlnff MflFv r 8omothlng doing every minute,' will dominate every day of the con- ventlbn. Asks to Go Down Local Lodge Plans to In- j n;. C..S*. itiate Large Class Fri- “L „ V1 , I l g T . day Night Convention PuUedUpDead Plans Reported. I - — 'Connecticut State Super intendent of Bridges Athene Lodge No. 790 a P. O Elks will Initiate a large clese of candidate, at the regular meeting Friday night, according to an an nouncement by Exalted Ruler F. S, Johnson. The meeting will start a few minutes earlier than usual'due to the fact that the number of new Mlaa Louis* Rostand of th. Voice; members to’ be Initiated Is a very Department, and of Mire Jean [ large one arid that much Important sujeart eithe Penartment of Pby-] buatnete must be contracted. MA,I Education. ■ ■ • I The final plans fbr attending the on Sunday morning at It o'clock, j National Convention of EDta, which Blriiop Candler- will preach th«,|, to ),« held in Atlanta In July. baccalaureate sermon. The people of Athena re well a* the ochool are to be congratulated upon hav lng the opportunity of hearing such an eminent man. A very beautiful musical program will be given un der the direction of Mire Rostand The Ole* Club of the school will ■lng an anthem by Beethoven "Cod in Nature." end Mire RortanC will ring "In The*. Oh Cod, Do 1 Put My Treat," by Bplcker. Sunday afternoon et 4 o’clock, tht ary Ann LIpacomb | Elementary ibool will hold It. annual Child* p>, y.eper. Service. At tWA/Mm, na*eydtag,af the BJWre fonep,, ,1 work Ip tho etudy of the Bible will be submitted by the commit tee in charge of the arrangements for approval. Following tbs regular buslnneau session of the lodge, the' Initta. tlon of candidate* will be taken up. and the request to made that all Elk* will be present If poestale as the degree team baa been very busy during the paet week thinking ont several new feature* for th* pleasure and entertainment of the old member* and the entertain, ment of the candidates. At tbe conclusion of the tnltla. t*ou the now members will be hot or*d bv.the club by a plate sgpd per. which will surpass any that have been given this year. Dies From Internal Hemorrhaire While Un derneath Water. <By. Aaeoc’ated Prase* EASTHADDAiVf.— Arnold Doe. fortv-one jygar* old nqd a resident of thto city, superiatondent of entt. di«l Submersed in n diving anit In tbe Connectlcutt River. Doe to said to bare had a little experience In diving and requested th* diver* working on a barge to be allowed to go down Into tbe. m(sp In And nf tha suits J. Delegates Here For Convention Governor Smith Fails to Signify Stand o)i Repeal Former Athens Minister Speaker At District Meeting of Epworth League. Closes Fridpy, Tht* delegates atendlng tha Ath ens District Epworth Laagu* In stitute at tha First Methodtat church wera entertained Thursday night at eupper in the Sunday school rooms of tha church by the Atheni Epworth League, after which ty pi- (Turn to pact six ) Orators, For and Against Liquor Law Repeal, Speak Over Four and One-Half Hours. had hit tho State Norma! School harder than any of tho Rtnto In stitutions of higher learning and assorted that It was utterly Impos sible! to opart to tho school on'tbe meager appropriation of 863,000. Ho sa(d somo of the buildings on tho Normal campus .were In a de plorable conditions nnd that tho stnto had not contributed one nennv so far for tho upkeep of tho buildings. MU8T ENLARGE , -v Tho present facilities of tho school. Dr. Pound "nld. would ac commodate only 535 and already nppllcntlons had been re ceived from 478. and fhst Word July 1 tho number would run he- vond tho capacity. He expected to nave to tiirn down several hun dred apnllcAlons before tb^ open ing of the fall term and that thiar would mean a Ions of about $830' for each student to the community} - that the institution was worth ap proximately a nunrter of a million dollars to Athens and that ft does cost Athens anything. Dr. Pound also emphasized the value of the Practice School to Athena (Turn to Page Six) (By AMOdfaied- Press., ALBANY. N. Y.—Oovtrtior Smith Thursday listened. Inscrutable of feature, but attentive, to''a flood of oratory for and against hla signing of the legislative repeal of tbd MU1- lan-Gage state prohibition enfonee- (Tum to Paqa Six) '*»» * Prominent Atlanta Women Speak fBefore League Of Women Voters ALL "TUNEO IN” If all advertising had to go out by radio, there’d bo precious little knowing how much good It did. Or how much harm. It might hit the llatonera When they were searching the ethor ) for Jazz, or for bed-time stories, or for comedy monologues, or to\ crop reports. - In . that cate they'd simply "tune out.” and the advertising would be wasted on a desert ot air.. what Is Much advertising—or called advertising—is een In these practical days methods that are almott aa definite aa thfa would bo. If people aren't In the mood for your message, they-| ! it. r, water In on® of the aulte. 'lag a tour over the Eighth Congrea. J b TZ ’owerert'nver ,°h"e £ —« “strict l.r th. Uo", Of of tbe bane Into about fort* fret Women Voter*, arrived In Athene of water. After he had been down Friday and ware apeaken at > about twentv. minute* and bad meeting In tbe Y. W. C. A. given no algntl, the men abovoj Mre. Harry chxmbeyla^i, atate drew him to th* top of tho river, • president of tha League, Mr*. R. only to find the! he we* dead. |L. Turman nnd Ilia. J. A, Olbba, It la believed that while under were In the party. At 4 o'clock the surface of th* river ha anf- the visitor* Held a conference with ’cred on internal hemorrhage .** the Wsrif Chairmen Ih Athene :h<* diving suit wot said to. bo In Mi* B. L. Jkrkstfn, first; Mre. O. rood shape nnd tbe air supply per- F. Gentry, second; Mre. Duncan feet. j Barnett, third; Mre. 8. 8/ Smith Three Atlanta women, conduct- and Mrs. J. P. Proctor, fourth, and Mlaa Katie Illck,. fifth. Following the conference with the Ward Chairmen an open meet ing was held at which time tbe vis itor. explained tbe purpoae of tbe League of Women Voter*. Tbe Ex ecutive Board of tbe Athene League of Voter* acted aa recojv- tton committee, Mr*. I* L. Hcn- dren. Otto* Josephine Wilkins, Mrs. Harrle pewi, Mrs. It. S, Bond, Mrs. C. 'A. Vor NoW'MIns Mildred'Mell. Mre. Proton Brooks, Mre. Milton Jenuigfii. Mrs. Fred J. Orr, Mre. Q. A. Crabb. • But If It comes to them when they are In the mood for It. whan they’re ready to pay attention, then It has all th« force of a gi gantic exclamation point. If, In addition to thalt It comes to them when they are actually looking for It, the communication Is perfset. That Is precisely what news paper advertising does. They've bought the paper because they want to read the news It pro. vldes. Your news, If you hava any for then They open the paper, all "tuned n," for the message you h — or them—for the Invitation ire extending. THE BANNER-HERALD