The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, June 24, 1923, Image 3

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SUNDAY. JUNE 24, 1923 TUB BANNER-MUtALD, ATHENS. MMM SOCIETY Office 12UI — By MR8. ALICE ADAMS — NOTES FOR MISS BACON’S CLASS IN BIBLE STUDY Subject: David In poetry, proph ecy, and thg gospel. It Is arresting to the beginner in careful Bible study to discover the frequency with which the nanio of David flashes like a thread of scarlet through the web of human history. No human name appears bo often or with anything like tlu variety and richness of suggestion. To study its significance through history, poetry, and prophecy is to gain a and affecting concep tion of jtym^Divine tenderness f to wards men, and the riches of ills purpose in •human redemption. Beginning with Ruth ns an an- vestress oj .David, name the suc cessive historical books that deal with David's life. Of these, the earlier contain more details and are more vivid. By the time the .Romans; once In Second Timothy •twice in Hebrews, and thrice in Revelation. Now, as a great Importance, tfy ti give the significance of these phrases: The city of David. T2»e son of David. The sure mercies of David. Xbe key of the house of David The root and the offspring of David. r Note also the questions asked bj Jesus in Matthew 12 atfB Mark 12. Read with meditative care eomo of the Psalms attributed to David. gj THE PINE8 TO U8E DENVER PRE88URE COOKER Keeping pace wltfe the times “The piness” will use the Denver Pressure Cooker haggled by Miss Bes8io Powell, who recently gave Chronicles |*ere written, about’K I* demonstration here of its many r.. 325. the value of public wor-»worth white qualities, the sclent!- ship in the promotion of nationalise reasons being Its Reading asset, unity had bocome evident, and* Th< Pines has already won fame David’s purpose to build the Tem-Jby itr up to date methods given pie and Us fulfilment through tho i to the public the greateat_and best agency of Solomon, and David's*" # J **“ contribution to the Hebrew psalter, which made so large and so glor ious a part of the temple ritual, are seen in a larger perspective. Iff the Psalms wd find the very heart of David, and the lofty re ligious emotions of tliq best of the Hebrew race are there given in Imperishable form, variety of food, and the managers are awake to the progress and ad- vantagement of everything; they feel sure that the Denver Pressure Cooker is ono of the greatest In- vrntions yet put on the market, which cooks everything perfectly and. very delicious, reducing the shrinkage of foods resulting from ordinary cooking and maintaining If possible noto tho occurrence • the food values, doing away with of David’s name In tho following i much of the danger of food poison- books: ling, making eve&thlng'pure and Jeremiah 15 times; Ezek lei. | wholesome. Hosct, Amos, and J*t?hanah, times. In the four Gospels, 38 times. In which'of these only one time. Why so seldom thorc? With much significance the name oc curs 11 times In Acts; 3 times In Domestic science experts, phy sicians, nurses, scientists, progres sive houewlvo and oxpert home canner endorse the use of the Denver (Pressure Cookers which are bound to prevail for hygenlc and economic reasons. Probably no place In tho city can give a hotter testimonial of its worth- than The Pines which, serves meals to hundreds daily. LUCY COBB WILL !• ENTERTAIN SUMMER SCHOOL BOAROER8 The Lucy Cobb Institute will be open throughout the Summor r School session and guests have ' commenced to arrlvo. Dr. and Mrs. (Cranberry of Now York came In !1ast week, Senora De Falrltllt of ; Charleston and Misses (Martha 'Memorial Hospital at '’Sweet, Sani- ( iary and Sife c6sta's ice cream may bo enjoyed by baby aa well , aa by grandfather Phono 192 COSTA’S Southern Mutual Building Wall of Augusta, Edith Holliman | and Alice Ray of Macon havo (registered. Dr. Cranberry Is head [of the Music department or summer school, and ho and his charming I Wife are being very cordially wel- roiped* Scqpra Do Ffbritito Wfll bf at the' head of the voice depart- Iment —(D~* (summer school STUDENTS FROM FLORIDA . Every year the Unlvorelty Sum mer School baa aeroral atudenta from Florida, end these have been among tho moat Intelligent and re- aponalvo of the student body. Among the first arrivals for tho present senior ere Mlaaea Melissa and Viola Smith and their brother, Mr. Al. O. Smith of Wall, nbula, Fla. The former are atu. dents of Agnes Scott College, the latter has been for two yean at Oglethorpe University. Mrs. R. A. Lavendar fa vlaltlnK her daughter, Mrs. E. L Morgan. Mrs. BUcksBear received the sad news of the death of her little granddaughter, Christine, the In fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. .Rogers of Demoreat who passed away Saturday offer a long Ill ness. Mrs. Roger* will he remem bored here as Miss Floyd Black- shear, and their many friends | deeply sympathise with them In ! their great sorrow. . „ 1 Mrs. Eugenia Bayne*. Mrs. Rose 7 Creekmore and children, of Ath Miss Clara Bradley who has f «^ntly graduated from the Onrflrb 1 Memoi D. C„ Is i Mrs. a W. nue Bernstein’s FtimrerAlHofrie Is Completed Athens Funeral Directors Have One of Most Con \yeni4nt and Beautiful Places of Kind in Coun try. By DAN MAOILL Bernstein Brothers new (intern parlors, just completed on Broat street In the building next door to of the same I aa one of the d convenient In and since b- public has at- rnbie comment the show placer White Footwear Just received a big shipment of White Kid and White Canvas Milit&ry or Spanish heel strap Pumps, price $5.00 to $10.00 Wig assortment of children White Slippers also MICHAEL SHOE DEPT. home in equip- a have Ie*t noth s it an oiUstand- ban a thousand and admired Mu filch the owner: •d. I Interior both to look at. The id are a sun joth attractively shed with hand ires. Statues art or lamps with p> and the fur ppointments nr and comfortifbb anywhere. >nnects with thr j, the woodwork fhk main recep- toilsomely mur ith the reposing rooms can >r n parlor fun- l ?ry conveniently nl entrance I tolr with a piil i* performing th seats necomn and fifty per- > aa well ns oth ao arranged th.i* ct Is obtained vs. The mat rh pews, and th- mbtes that o PtS. >r, carpeted t< I at all. ertendr building with each of the va- •t Including the use 'if Jased, a room » displayed, t the night men paraphernalia, r burial laments ilng room donr hlngs and a bus' i roodwork in thr* the corridor h f with Ivory wallri To Attend Course School Will Give Course £“2 «■£ “ For First Time in Its'- —- da " r History This Year. dns, are visiting Mrs. O. A..Tucker. 1 —‘Montlcello News. Jr OTmt- I CaCtierS 'Miss Hattie Gould Jefferies, wbo has been visiting Atlanta friends since Lucy Cobb commencement, is now with Mr. and Mrs. T. Harry Oatts.—Augusta Chronicle. —R0- Mrs. Carlton Beusse, Miss Min nie Paschal! and Henry and Janies Beusse notored to Atlanta for the week-end. and Mrs. Will Griffith 0 1 Wafklnsville spent Saturday In th'* city. * r-fiB— Friends of Mr. and mA. E. Wen- dllnger will be glad to learn that their little daughter Maudo Vir ginia Is Improving after an Illness of two weeks. HP— Mr. and Mrs. Colie Thornton and young 6on Bobbleare spending the weekend in Augusta. —Bh— The friends of Mr. Leon Lester will be pleased to learn of his satisfactory condition following an operation at tbe General Hospital for appendicitis. Little Miss Alice Atkinson of Atlanta is visiting her /Hint, 'Mrs. Alice Fambrough on Hall street. —HH* - Mrs. (R. T. Dudley Is visiting in Toccoa. Mrs. J. E. IJIghtower left tkb morning for Americus, after spend Ing two week* with her parents. -ffl- Misa Annie Re Jago will vlall relatives in Americus for sever* weeks. —ffi- Mlss Ruth Hightower has return ed home after visiting relatives ir the city. - (S’ - Mrs. T. E. Jago is spending some time with her parents. Judge and Mrs. Thornton on Oakland avenue 4 “to— The Clarke County Choir will meet with the Attica Baptist church on the third Sunday afternoon July 15. at 3 o'clock. A Inrgf* crowd is expected. -m- Mr*. C. O. Carter of Memphis Ir visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ber nkrd on the Jefferson Rond. -FD~ Messrs. Alvin Teat nnd Aubrey flllder hiked to Rnyston Frida* .night to attend tho play “Wjomcn’r Right.” for the day. At eleven o'clock eadh day tho Association will Join wire tno Sum, mer School (n the general assem- T f k .1 q »,.«{b!y. exercises. On one morning mere JUIV Z-/tn 0,680 *H1 be conducted by tho Aa- * j sociatlon. From 8-9 the members may take Subsequent Judge Russell madjjwiii vjsiriCWcixo, Ori^f lUplds j POUCEMAKE Sa o.*? na ! P*/n. Nunnall/!ha. left for tho market. Mr. Bern-. will visit (Chicago, Grand Rapids j and NeW York for tho purnoao of lor governor against Joseph Mi; nurchsslng new goods. Brown of Marietta. Although unsuc. | m ‘ cesfnl In his campaigns for gov* Gprsliline Farrar la entered the lists as a candidate fof i Uera J? ,ne / 81 I. ar ", PAOB ukup TTriiverdifw q „ „ » . *•» memnern may take ernor was moro fortunate when hdi university bummer part in physical training classes, the court of appeals. He served! In October, 1923, the State Ex ecutive Board of Dae P. J. A. adopted a resolution urging that the State University put on a course for Parent-Teacher mem bers as Boon as possible. Mrs. Ma bel Jonos, president of the Geor gia Branch, sent tne resolution to tho Summer School and offered tho services of Mrs. Winifred Car- berry as lecturer. The director ac cepted the offer and arranged for the week, July 2-7, for Shis special course. recent letter Mra. Jones says: "Your letter was received with pleasure. I am glad to know that one of my dearest hopes Is aboot to be realised and that we are to have this course for Geor gia this summer. I*shall be glad are with it. the work will meet the wishes of the committee. What a Battery Service Re a 1 ly Means Explained Few motorists really know much about the battery that makes their car efficient c*r troublesome as tbo case may be, and fewer still know what “battery service” , embraces. That a practical battery scrvIdU, embodies more than the sale or recharging of a battery is demon strated dally by the Athens Bat tery r©.. Fxide dealers and service on all makes. Few motorists who uso the Exld' eerhaps kno*" thej. up to your years ago “Exlde” was a trade name little known, but in that time ninety-nine per cent of tb<* motor- to come over and help If I can. and hope to 'soak in’ tbq. course myself.” Tbe National Association put on the course at Columbia last sum mer and will do io again «t Chat institution and at Boston Univer sity, Ifyatfnls (Mass.) Normal School. It Is the hope of the Na tional Association that representa tives of the local P. T. A.'s In the south Atlantic states be represent ed so that they may carry on the 1 work to better advantage during the next year. At least pne repre sentative from tho District Assoc, iallons should be sent and It Is expected Chat largd numbers from the nearer branches will attend. It »s ono of six opportunities to ob tain this instruction this summer. Mrs. -Carbary, tho Field Secre tary, Is a graduate of the Uni versity of Wisconsin. “With her wide experience In P. T. A. work sho has been invaluable to thr National Congress In effecting slate organisations and Instructing local branches.” PROGRAM Lectures By Mr* Carberry Dally From 8:00 to 11:00 Monday, July 2. 1.—History of toe National Association. Object—1. To give parents beat opportunity to secure fnformatfor in regard to home-building, chlld- renrlng, and educational opportu. nltnes, 2. To bring home and school-fnto dose, hnrpiantoiiM 'partnership. To bring to the school tho re sources of the homo. 3. To study conditions In com munity affecting leisure time o' children. TuePday,* Julv 3. H.—Typo of work dono by ^arent-Toacher As sociation. Sociological oasts. Departments: Health, education. i’iomo service, public welfare, or ganization, and efficiency. Wednesday, July 4. III.—How can tho Parent-Teacher Association help tho home? How can the Parent Teacher As sociation help the school? Exlde storage batterjes are mad- by pioneer manufacturers, and ar* used for many purposes. Tralnr are lighted, fire department ap- peratus equipped with them, tele- Inhono and telegraph and radio companies use them, nnd it Is op' of the most popular automobile batteries on tho market. Tho army monoplane T-2*nsed by I.fcuten ants Kelly and MacReady In their non-stop transcontinental flight was equipped with an Exlde bat tery. Athens Batterv Co. are dff r\!bn tors for the Exide and operate- nor vice station on all makes. Rbar' their announcement In this Iasi". OIL DISCOVERED IN PRUSSI/ PBINNE, Prussia.—Oil Contain Ing 20 per cent benzine in rcimrt ed to have been struck at Olberpr near here. It is stated, that tin wells spouted as high as the loft; boring towers when tho first strik- was made. The area under i x ploltatlon covers 9.D00 acres. Chief Justice of State Su preme Court to Be Can didate For Senate, Is Report \ ATLANTA.—Chief Justice Rlcv. ard B. Russell of Ihe -jcurxla Su premo Court will bo a candidate for the United States Somite Ir, opposition to Senator William J. Harris, according to a story' the Atlanta Journal la publishing Sun day. Sonator Harris, tho Journal story .story saye. will stand for re-elec- tiru It !• accepted as cortaln. Th» senior senator has been In Georgia pioce the adjournment of congress How can tho Parent Teacher Aa-i ,ookln * after his political fenac. sociatlon help tho community? How can tho Parent Teacher As sociation help the rural commu nity. Thursday, July 5. IV.—How to orgamze a Parent-Teacher Assoc iation. How to conduct a Parent-Teach er Association. Friday, July 0. V.—-Work: (Plan ning programs; study of school systems; attendance problem: pu pil government In home and school: H d*’al activities; recreation and delinquency. The first hour each day, t*10, will bo a lecture, followed by a round-table discussion of tho topic Corning on the evo of tho .... sembling of tho Georgia general assembly and at a time when moqy politicians are in Atlanta tho re. port concerning Chief Justice Rus sell’s amoltlon and purpose wqjr the subject of widespread interest and comment . * J«dge Russell has been a famil iar figure and on Important fac tor In state politics Blnco 190tf •*hen ho made a spectacular al though unsuccessful canvass for the gubernatorial nomination om of a field of several candidates Including Hoko Smith,'Clark How ell and the late James Smith of OglethoriK} cmrfty, J. II. Estell of rs have spare*’ tho new funern* itiful ns well */ ind Jhey 4lbv* Who have. no> yet visited this new funeral horn should avail H»q«gM"Wr first opportunity, ns It Is n re vein tion to be aborted lhro';gh e*i ox cclient an vtabiiahment i! Special Prices on Brand New Sandals White Kid Trimmed in Red Kid. White Kid Trimmed in Green Kid. White Kid Trimmed in Black Patent. White Reignskin Cloth Trimmed in White Kid. Tan Calf Trimmed jn Dark Russia. $8.50 Values Now $6.00 Green and Blue Kid Sandals 1. $6.50 White Calf California Sandals .. .. .. $6.85 Johnson Shoe Co, GOOD HOSIERY TOO 261 Clayton Street Granted Her Divorce NEW YORK—Omldlna Farrar with distinction on the bench o|; Has won her suit for divorce again*' this court for'several years and Id Lou Teilcgen, ti was anounccd Sat- tho last democratic primary waa d.urday night by Samuel Untermey- candidate for Chief Justice of thd^r, for Miss Farar. s .. Supremo Court apainst WUIam H.J A refreree’s report recommencing Fish. Judge Russell won a hand^i* decree, was filed Saturday, h< some victory. jsald. j Action by Miss Farrar was J>e- Jgun .two years aog and In her I complaint sho charged her actoi I husband with infidelity with three jHvomen. It was reported that _ _ (Referee Harrison's. report held the IVIaV"U' , 4af in Fast opera star had sustained her al- maiACl III ugattoM on two counts. The court recently struck out charge^ that Jake- Bernstein' of Bernstelri Miss Stella Lorriraore and Tellr- Brothers, furniture establishment, gen had bene intimate. Bernstein Off For Furniture liquor Raid Headed by detective Charlie Sea- graves the police made severe! lt(fc J uor raids Saturday morning and | made three arrests. H. and Othia . Dawson who live on Washington ' street were apprehended with gallon and Robert tBurgess, a negro living on Hull .street, was taken In tow with two gallons. Warrants were taken out ag tho alleged offenders In the courts. , BAND CONCERT AT EAST LAKE Sunday Afternoon By S. M. C. Band From 4 to 6 Cool Summer Focks REDUCED imS51 Fw i*** TTB Select from this bip lot of cool summer dresses, ■ ■ ^ made from Voile. Swiss Batiste. made from Voile, Swiss Batiste, Shantung (cot- “•B* ton), Ratine, French Gingham, Linens, and Organdies, your supply for this season at this greatly reduced price. Not a dress in this lot that sold for less than $6.00,*and many are much better values. Broken lots and sizes up to 42 only; but wonderful values at this price for Mon day $4.75 Pongee Silk and Tub Silk Dresses Special At $9.95 You will make a mistake if you do not see these special dresses. They .are cool, they are washable, and we believe they are the best values offered in this kind of dress. Several styles in sizes to 40 only. - Special .. $9.95 See the Now Pastel Shades in Pretty Georgette Crepe Dresses Priced $19.75 to $45.00 $1.89 SWEATERS . He^6 ■ is a wonderful value in Slipover Sweaters; • all long slceVe and most every color. About 300 Sweaters to choose from; all wool and . silk and wool. Values to $4.50. Special .. .. .. $1.89 $3.75 Silk Princess Slips Black, navy, grey and biege only in a nice qual ity silk. You will pay $5.00 elsewhere for this quality. Special Monday ... $3.75 Mayburg’s 278 Claytoit St. * SKIRTS Pleated skirts in cream and white are very smart. We show several styles. Specially Priced $8.45 to $9.95