The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, July 01, 1923, Image 4
MnnH. FUNNY PAPER In The At- lanta Oeorqlan EVERYDAY. Subscribe Now—Phone 300. Non Catholics are .cordially In ,-lted to attend those nervier*; FATHER CLARK. *f Farm Inc ho .rftl lx hunhand li; School 1< ivited. tt Methodist Church Lumpkin Htreet nn<! Ifan m bawwmmmkald. a thews. obokoia SUNDAY, JULY VIMS The University Fostering of Music ' Mr. George Folsom Cranberry As Seen By jSignora DeFabritis By 'SIGNORA OE FABRITIS Simmer with is wealth of flowering plants, shady trees n ali , * hat's meet overhead. Stately buiidfags. winding wall's and \ouu) full of vision and eager enthusiasm of what Life offers (and -that is the picture pre sented by the University ot Oeoffcia's* Summer School in the JtcauUful city of Athens. Mu It i4&n inspiring sight to watch 2the crowds that move husllv to and from the several places where ' multitudinous courses (quite one *hundrfrjl in number) are held. iThe •{State •Normal, Lucy Cobh and the jnhreMty of Georgia) One can ho Ma ! reach of Music and Mu ll their lives can hardly ist win! this opportunity study musi* miller such guld- »• means t" the striving starved 1 of tiie Imiidreds and thousands music jHople scattered all pver I i too thinly populated section of J lovely South. ; 1 hat wonderful art, that I and leads its disciples ! iard t<» reach tlm ultimate n gained by a few of the Is. arouses tn the serious I WINTERVILLE MAN SELLS $250 WORTH OF PRODUCE IN SIX WEEKS ON CURB MARKET Oconee County Woman Praises Market. Sells $50!i>u7k-t Worth in Month. Issue| br [^ 408 Permits. |mu<i« WhM« Leghorn roosters c arket .-qK-ned Mrs. Har ris about that number of die will kef p. Rost wick of Gostwick’ »t large quantity of Rer-| nions he ' raised. t)n , 1 a half "f land M* Boat 1 ised 3,000 opundw of on* ie speeirnons. . which’' tfell n cents per pnumJ/ He re in order for one hundred while mi the Market you. His total cost of raising kgtinK is about two cents nd, Mr. Boatwiek atatea Is next Market Day. „ .It® Sure, that in this body of, great an artist in liLs «*r her field r t ! l, ‘. mo % t , rv ‘ SK “' FREEMAN. S. Students, that comes to attend the j : .m tiie interpretive musician and as *'iV”''*.*,*. .ll«V 1. '!! j arrangements have Bumnt^r School at the University. | rare, and so in h inging Into wh * K "J 'there'ire no idlcca or indifferent j«lose *>m h with I undreda of eager U*^!!' " '"j (W»a, ffoT’ one does not willingly J sVfdents of nvisie, especially of K. . . ■* "" Up the precious and, in many piano, such a teacher as Mr a the only period of rest and . Boom- Gn*nb*rr\, tin* University j YESTERDAY'S relaxation to concentrate study. I of G.-omi;. ha: done more to slim- f LARGEST S (O? *U|ddi#t one is eager for progress j hlate interest in the nrt of music j A&iaM atfd knowledge, and the entire . and to stahlli«e tlx- ideals that un- s-.turd iv's r.ta bodv this vast Summer School { d-rHe tlm art *>f toaehine thr.i: | th( . f 10 |,i here sim •• tl leapworks«with an earnestness of pur-1 could have pnssihlv heen don - in (, ,j ,’ v y,, - * < - in v ,.i ling (pose that could, well be emulated |« generation or more of unaidrirj. ' lth [hjr thfcj students of universities and • | rfvate effort 'from Lumpkin "street to Joel's llegrts during the so called scliul- j ij n ,|j V i»|iml piano student ! two i.locks <lu«n lin.:i l | stre-1. in 1 lnc * nla< ‘ c because there is a Me.»- itic *»ear. “ lujio goes out from fliis course nf!«ddltlon the sidewalk on the other colony. Wolf Creek, w»ar Mr. ~ I. n**,| with .„.r, Kron,^”- Th, -to.» or l.ruo Hrrlo, nvrnnllw: In until iift-r I ..VI...* I neJo N hol.l in .X^ t nltoiT otlfs, talnnlu. i.r xsi. ,lii,lonl«. »• **>" Mork.-i , m< mln-rs nt tho_»..t Mi.I.irj. They will hand on to thrtfr young ,tnd ,h “ Ha,fS wcre be > ond that children this glowing torch pm 1 l* nHl h'uturday when ?l >oo wftrth light the wav to the road that sur*- I prod in— was s"ld It is estimated. . . Iv on] V'evltnbly In this 'great} 'That the Curb Market is paying I , f ' country of great present financial. , " ,,h l'f»dueer and cousin industrial and sclent’fic aclih»vo. l,,IH * ,p, » VPd * Mrs * A,,dn !WOO(l Avomio w., M , nx>nl mill will, vj.ui says. With her daughter. Mrs 1"°'’" avenue, rwiu niMH and with vast notentlol now- ' . .... M ,.. t , , v ,. m.. will he held fr Im of the Arts light l*™'!,' 1 ‘V." 1 ./.! H .! U ' P hail Baptist church Sunday at p. in., luter-ment following I To ^ie University of Georgia bo- r longs!,the great honor of placing vlthioi the reach of hundreds of UnafUlBtudcntH and teachers of.the UtlL the epoch making or opja - unity*of Study with a Master of ho Alt of Teaching Musfr with • ; «cla)h references to the need of HoNfis—Mr. George Folsom Gran*- ^lTJltdlrcctor of t’e Grarh«*ii-v n’afbrtc S<*bool, Carnegie JIt.11* ).—Preliminary been perfected al meeting of the Mcnnonlte ticm-ril Conference to bo held here next month. This lit tle town of scarcely a thousand persons is prepacing | to entertain between four and five thouAnd visitors who will attend the cbn- ferenco. The meetings will laut r week ahd will be held nji the cam pus or Freeman collude, a Men- ronffe school. Freeman was chosen as a incct- i JTork City, well known pedn. Uf* whose splendid system o! k Mli-BfKht-)fcRriiig.' ’has quite )Rftionized methods of pn*ccn. Of the Art of Teaching |,r Uranbcrry is a Musician yWta embracing is that tern __Tind 5j ow compreheTfo'vct ll«» ha , ““~hr1»ioK» Imgrfmtlon, knowhdge of An "° ,h,H ,ar ^° bo ' iv 1 the Art of Music and tained to all i|»tes tiie vr.-v fabric of i WORTH -Wlkhe ’jfrt of Teaching that inspires 1subjected to the Infectinu mxlall pg>tls, the talented and the bms j Licion of such real musical knowl- | v txaVn an rnthtxHia«m for Jedpt'-wo need no lorger cry for an i „f $250.00 since tin 1 Hglftcm to try and reach the j American School of Composition ! lay thl . M;irIw . t op .. IK . (l with . ntl ouaiichl#fenient he pictures so glow- an American Omra. an American I fl , rrr ,j ;i |, ::onc . , ,,f | W „ weeks whet* *ltigly 4 and Intelligently, the goal. Sv,m ’hony. Oratorio or ‘ omposer j ho ha<1 |f) p ,„ w Jn ,i,„ rPf . n rd of ii ^JpIvheoMin music tiocomes some! If tig sours, for hiicIi an outcome will j t< * .tifng U»r som-s. for hucIi an outcome will I jjwnlnp of Wlntervillc. Mr inb/ifs handsome new nunrtcra str im»nPthan ir.' ce notes and signs. j ,,p ap inevitable ns the coming of j ptmlap ,u v i ; , r PM h<- would'not hav* fm rollcue avenue and Is on- o ' w »* -' r .. n u f i c 7„"„ K . h Vh 1 ' 1 •*»•«■ »>«< »u h ,,.- u~Ju^ , muMnK i„„Luii™„ „ um, but }li living pulsating thing .... ............. . J/Mjai'.bcau.'ty. through the stimulat-j f,,r< h of the leaves 4n spring aftev | M f, t | )0(l|l fl „ t p,, ,*„ P i, , r^Sag: olthe mental concept of round, jthecyutf sleep 6f winter, the awak- m ji»mh to that would proha 11 ening of the soul and intelligence , i;ivp | ost „ ric .-ti,i r «i h « p^iple who by the good fortune «f. man througl* contact with ideal' j to bin extra Commercial Mails Dividend Check second quarterlj [’oinmerelal Bun 1 been received bj Within the pan' n, Jr., Ih presld nan Is rattier. Things We Have Known * Tiie recent business condition has brought to the forefront of thought many fundamental con siderations that have alawys been known but have been damned with faint praise. Human nature in the mass is very much like human nature in the individual. One of its domi nant characteristics has been sum med up in tne observation, “You never miss the water till the well runs dry.” We never appreciate fundamental tnings until we have occasion to do without them. V This observation has a special application to. the Demand of the public for the products of indus try. While the demand was at high tide and everybody was busy trying to supply, that Demand at a profit no one, seemingly, gave a thought to where the Demand came from, iiow long it might last, or what would, happen if it should fail. We merely assumed the per manent existence of tiie Demand, just as we assume the presence of water, air, and fire. But a day came when Demand began to subside, and in many in dustries it came almost to a full stoj). And then we missed it, and realized, as never before, what an important thin£ it was. And we began to inquire where it came from in the first place, and how it might be restored. We always knew — everybody knew—that Desire for things made a Demand for them in the market. That people desired things we ac cepted as an elemental fact. But when we discovered that Desire fluctuated we began.to appreciate that Desire, as we know it, is a thing created by the art of man. It is a highly specialized form of an elemental need—just as a Louis XVI chair is made out of a tree. This discovery led to another equally important discovery that the means of refining and special izing that Desire was Advertising. The gigantic work that has been accomplished by modern advertis ing now stands out in bold relief. It has been the means by which the? refinements of civilization have heen made known and made desirable, and this desire has heen made into Demand. It is a simple fact that a million profitable forms of industria 1 activity owe their very existence to the fact that Advertising upheld the stand ards of living ,vliich in turn pro vided tiie demand for their .pro ducts. '. Published by The Banncr-IIcrald in Co-operation With The American Association of Advertising Agencies First Baptist Church ; J.3f. Wl S« isday F®ll»U ^Superintendent. g specially invite the Rumfpet to r.rnl v>ill have clauses t« uinstances have been within ‘of true slncerWy and beaut\ SERVICE wo™ FOOMTON6 these ince Avcnus Baptist Church R. K. Uonncly, pastor, subject for the nun him; I. •ffeis ipcond sermon of the i.erien • rlfirst Psalm, entitled. ‘ T I Man's Cempaj Sunday School 'dock. Thor” HM! es and an InterestltfR ’ B, Y. P. !J. la having: Ins time each Sunday at 7:30. You dins any Union will find nt well spent In coming ti netting. onnectlon with the though National Celebration of tin '■r of July 4th. tin subject will be, “Victor* suits.“ welcome to Ootl'n house tore Sprang* rs and th? poo ( Central Presbyterian Church , Hew.' Samuel J. Cartledi;**, pastor .y Uf] J. T. Dudley Superintendent “if ffndity School. *J Mjj Hugh L. Hudson, ^organis' jjpdtyir-ctor of music. 1 Sunday School 0:45»u. m. i PMachlng hy the juistnr at 11 and 8: **° h* nt. * ifCMUtiin endeavor StmWties ? Bsttao p. m. -),i* ' Tlt4 sacrament of the I^»rd’>. sup %er f*h connection with the Morn* ^>rvlce . Hodgson will give u short b'Rinnia tit 8:15 p. m. ftpeciul- Invitation to Jltudentn JSft 8. E. Wasson. Pastor, ’I*. Stephens Sunday School Mp|llntendent j SliOday School 10 a. m. wjMkbnon and Communion Ser iicojlt 11:15 (% m. JW u l ar service at 8:30 p, m Lprorth eague at 7:30 p. m. r«l,,r meeting Wednesday eve 8:30 p m. Thy Woman's Missionary So- >l* ty meets every '/irst and thin mtj/MdMy afternoon at 5 o'clock in h< Ah.irch. I Afppecial invitation is extend'd Surruio r School students. p ^ Joseph's Catholic Church « j»i?8Hlon and Low Muss at High Mam at 10:30 a* m. tion of the'Dlcssed Sac- They Bestow Measureless Good Wherever Groups of Men A re Gathered Away from Home Influence L EGEND anti history furnish endless stories of the active assis- 1 tancc of women to lighting 7ncn in time of war. But history turns her face away and hesitates to record the pets of women camp followers of other days. J.ct us pass item hy with the conv^ tnent that they were as grave a danger to any fighting force as were the soldiers Under the enemy’s banner. It was not until the Crimean war that JTtorcrcc Nightingale, in spite of the officers* instituted in the British army a relief and welfare work for soldiers which resulted in a p« inancnt organisa tion. The medionl service had broken down. The death rate in certain barracks in England was twice that in th * surrounding civil population. The “Angel of the Crimea** landed in Scutari in November, 1854, with a corp-4 of 58 nurses and in spite of opposi tion cleaned house ^Vc think of her as a nurse hut she did other tldngs. She opened -reading and writing rooms, arranged for sol diers remittances home, overcame the influence «-f camp followers. The title of her report, “Notes Affecting the Health. Efficiency and Hospital Administration of the British Army,” shows her to have, been not only the forerunner of the Red Cross nurse hut of the woman welfare vvorket as well. WOMEN NEEDED IN WELFARE WORK i-ong before the Unite*. States en- from F-ance aivl England of the tered the war, her leader* had been work done hy w men to aunt the impressed by the , reports cominjroldicr, directly ari indirectly. Thc« not only acted as voluntcepnurses^ and atnbblancc drivers but women bf • high and low degree went into criL* nance factories, thus freeing meif for) the combatant forces and for back of ihc lines; they baked bread, worked in ‘quartermaster's Mores, ■ acted as couriers, electrical oper- „ ators and clerical workers, and tdokj . part in all forms of activities except ^ . - * - . ■ . ... , . , _ „ iiie actual fighting. participation ra its actual execution, qualified women for canteen work touch of real home atmosphere. When in the United States the men When individual women began to are necessary.” > These women had They sang, sewed on buttons, rjanccd began to move toward tins canton- seek admission into these undertak- jo be strong, sensible, with a knowl- ' with the men, read Aloud, played the meats it .at once became evident that ings the new problems of welfare edge of life, good "mixers," loyal piano, led religious services, but in American women at home ind abroad contributed Incalculably to welfare work. Beginning with ac- thritie* at home very soon they were In Europe and then at the front Mrs. Vincent Astor was in , charge of the first canteen for soldiers, in Brest at early at July, 1917. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., opened the fint canteen in Paris that month. At left it one of the home ecthritiee—”Y” workers aid- tag the .departing soldiers; Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. Above b Mrs. Vincent Astor. standing in center, with back to canteen wall. At right, a woman motion picture operator. American women, who could serve work with tiie American army, there otherwise would not be content v witl» was some hciitance but the ultimate war time activities at home, with result was proof'that a complete Itanding out good cheer to men on welfare program required women, troop trains or with nursing, im- not as substitutes for <nen, but as portant .as these were. They ycre active participants, not going to permit their men to go Mrs. Vincent Astor offered her from home to camp and thence to services to the Y % M. C. A. and, a foreign land without taking with arriving in France in July, 1917, was them every povsible home environ- put in’charge of‘the first canteen tticnt. * * for sailors at Brest Mrs. Theodore Any attenyrt to extend home in- r Jtoosevelt, Jr., opened thc # first cao- flucficcs*and r home comforts to sol- teen in Paris in July.* * diers in camp ami field not only must Conferences* between British an# be supported by the woman at home American leaders who knew* of the but necessitated her co-operation in work of women in the huts in F.ng- the planning and directing of the land resulted in a cable to New undertaking and her presence and % York: "Unanimous opinion tlpt to military fcnd Association rule, in all things they represented to tiie thorough sympathy with the Asso- soldiers tl»c women at home, ciation’s social and religious aims But it must be recognized that the and having an interest in spiritual work of the women was often most things. The general plan was that laborious and exhausting. With the women should work at the ports, many a division, the serving of hot with the Service of Supply, and in drinks and sandwiches to troops en- the training areas. training or detraining, was largely What did the women do in France? performed by them. Forty-eight Tiie 'first recruits were intended as hours without intermission, on a canteen workers, but canteen sendee railroad station platform, in heavy came to ccficr the multitude of ac- rain,-preparing and passing out hot tivities. which any woman of mature chocbiate, was an experience many judgment would undertake for any women knew. « group of young men away from- Hospitals and dressing stations, home.. First of all they brought to when the wounded were pouring in. homesick men- in a foreign land, found women working at top speed doing 1 a grinding, arduous work, a for bqprs at a stretch, assisting sur- * geons, bathing and cleasin*^ preparing food and drinks,.] ing to every need within tf ‘‘ Even the cliauffcur’s job at times. In the advance zone M< workers experienced the of the troops, serving towns where nightly bombing of* foriling made it necessary for all hgitds to go out into the fields to steep * They were billeted in indicated rooms, and at tiotes had to forage for, their food. i * The women from Amerkg were ably supported in England # ‘'Trance and Italy by the wonioi of the American colonics in all tfie«rcoun^ tries. A most significant.4fvdop ment of the war was the pgngf thal the right kind of woman”; in military camps not onlj harm to herself but with less benefit to the men. gave the uttermost rcs,^ feet loyalty and comraclci,., .1 new thing in welfare the result was good. Nov) the old time t&rd-boilcd pim^-xuixi soldier may attempt a sneer at -cod diing recruits, hut if war must f the women of America *“ it tiiat their soldiers are ^ incentive toward decent lit This experience has for future service wifi sailors. Its apnlicatiok. ™ industrial, life is obvious. • J]|g rig! k nd of women ran midw a set Vice nf measureless Kood wherev^ fraira of n are gathered am, from home iaflucsci _ - : ■iii- M