Newspaper Page Text
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS. gro/OTA
THURSDAY. JULY 5, 1923-
PAGE SEVEN
uUand most etlthnslsttlc Over Keif'
In the state by the Lesion.
COHEN AND
AIDES HONORED
Hnatt where the weather was mimtly
favorable.
Rev. l»r?or abtfftilmr '<*KuniWn.
THe‘ Rov. W. Harvey Wnge», *n+
MllUown. la In Funston, assist int
the Rev. Mr. Shumate, the pastor.
In a meeting In the Baptist church
there.
The Rev. W. .1. Churchwcll, th<
| iniK-ilonnry evangelist of the ^ Val
dosta District is in a meeting at
Kings Chapel, ifi Berrien county.
Th* Rev. Jr E'il (lain, of Omega
is doing the preaching in a meeting
at Sumner, Ga., where the Rev. I-
I* Barr, eff fautnn Is pastor.
The Rev. J. Frank Snell begins .* |
meeting at Concord Church, Lunlei !
utyiint.t. July 19, - ‘ i
The Valdnsfa TJIsfKct- camr ]
inerting at Mt. #lon Catnp Ground j
in. Lowndes county, begins July 13 j
under tile direction of the pret^dlm j
elder, the Rev. C. G. ifrooks. o'.
Valdosta. The Rev. Reese Griffin
of Moultrie, will preach twice i \
day during the meeting. The Rev ,
.1. F. Ford, of Lake Pdrk is pastoi |
of this church.
Arkansas: Some damage by weevil
In southwest, infestation less than
usual in most portions. ,
Lousiana: Weevil Increasing, dam
age slight.
Tennessee and North Carolina: Nt»
comment.
Mississippi:
compared wH
variable probably mostly slight as
plant? lack sufficient development
Alabama: Weevil doing considera
ble damage locally In south.
Georgia: Weevil worse than last
year, damage Increasing. Too wet
poison. ’
Florida: Condition rRther poor due
to heavy excessive rains, grass and
weevil. Much abandoned.
Weevil numerous
Delegates Return to
Homes After A
Weevil
(Continued From Pro* One)
Beautiful Washington
Woman .Gives More
Evidence '-
for their service in tho Georgia de
partment which retalDB its place
ns leader in percentage of increase}
in membership, since the last' na-!
tlonaf convention.
Approximately five thousand peo
ple saw the fireworks display on
Hanford Field Wednesday after
noon. Throe thousand or more were
In the park itself while hundreds,
stood on the Lumpkin street hill,
and in automobiles parked along 1
the street to view the’display.
For fully tl 'rty pilnutes the fire.
South Carolina:
but damage slight with
vchtive measures.
FOURTH LIKE SUNDAY
IN NATION’S CAPITAL
WASHINGTON. D. C—Not ever
a flrccra'clcer tnnrreul the sabbatf-
cal silliness of the national capi
tal's, Fourth of July.
-All government departments an*
business houses were closed, and
tho^h thousands of persons flock,
^gtl to parks and amusement place:
for picnics and outings, there wa:
no official observance of tho om
hundi-ed and forty-seventh anni
versary of the nation's birth.
Tho shooting of firecrackers anc"
the Indiscriminate use of othe
forms of fireworks was prohibited
by city regulations and .the metro-
politan police had strict orders t»
take all offenders into clustody. $?*
tho day was celebrated wifely and:
MARKETS
ATHENS COTTON
The local cotton market closei
ut 26Va cgnts. Wednesday was i
legal holhtay so ther° b no previou
close to give for that day.
works commilfee kept things “poP- ;
jplng.” The display was very beau.!
tiful and successilul. Wednesday:
night, load by the various bands}
here for the convention, the torch!
Hght parade was held, presenting a
very beautiful spectacle. Hundreds)
af people crowded tho city street*
to watch this event.
The dance at Ufoas oaidltorlum:
NEW YORK COTTON
Open High Low* Closo I’
22.75 23.04 22.45 22.?8 22.8.'
.. 20.00 20.45 25.50 26-40 2«.0u
.. 23.50 23.1*8 23.22 23.77 23.6!
. 23.05 23.38 22.75 .23.28 23.1F
M. Bids: January 22.50; .Inly
Vtuber 23.30; December 22.8C
attracted a tremendous crowd a mV
was a very colorful and beautiful
affair.
GREY UNVEILS TABLLET I
TO WALTER H. PAGI?!
'LONDON.— Many distinguished !
persons in world politics nud lit-1
ernture Wednesday witnessed the;
unveiling by Viscount Grey of a;
tablet to the memory of the late
Ambassador Walter Hines Page i : i
the ancient chapter hou^e of West- J
minster Abbey- ,
Every part of the ancient lane |
was phckt*l, those present includ-1
ing Secretary of the Treasury;
Mellon, the ~^vhole staff of the j
American Embassy, members of
the British Cabinet, Lord and Lady
Astor. Lady Bryce, Lord Burnham, j
Lord and Lady Desborough, Iler-,
bert Asquith- Winston Churchill, i
Lord Lansdowne, Major J. J. As- j
tor, the Archbishop of York, Vis
countess Harcourt and many oth
ers.
NCV/ ORLEANS COTTON
Open High Low Close I’. C
Jan 22.10 22.33 22.14 22.00 22 .’8
(July .. .. 20.03 26.42 25.86 26.38 20 21
jOct. .. .. 2170 "23.20 22.47 23.0S 22. f 3
Dec 22.40 22.88 22.20 22.77 22.60
11 A. M. Bids: January 22.15; July
25.86; October 22.53; December 22.33.
Market Gossip
Roroivpf! Over F.
Linnell & Company’s
Private Wire
THF AUXILIARY
»N THE STATE
NSW YORK STOCKS
Open 1 P.M. I*
Coca Cola 75% 75% 7
Kennicott Copper 32% 32% 3
lVR.'p»*e|- »»% 89% !i
Amec. TeL Til. .. 120% 120 12
Read Herald
Want Ads.
bouts in tho state held undor tho
•■risplcos of tho legion under n,
"cn'miscRlon and the National E*-
ocutlvo Commlttoomon for tho state
m*tdo
New Ford
COUPE
Conoliy Motor Co.
good. Too cool and wet In most of ing season has set in In enrnea
Mississippi Alabama and Georgia, In- this section.
whore progress was poor, though fair The Rev. W D. Rnburn, of Remv,
progress was reported in Georgia tho erton, begins a meeting at\ tm
first part of tjio week. Progress. Methodist church in Naylor :Wetl-
c; million fair to very good In Caro- Inesday. He will be assisted by the
„ member of the State Ex*».
cutlve committee.
The meeting Thursday , was at-
♦ended bv delegates and visitors
that filled tho Colonial theatre and
was pronounced tho larges attend-
F0®H7DN© MEN c ?(wir
SEK.VDCE WBTH
F )R the first time in history a demonstration of mass games
and play-for-all will be part of the program of the Olympic
games of 1924 in Paris. The idea and its application are an
American contribution. Strange as it may scon, the war gave
opportunity and impetus for the spread of these things as never
before. Outdoor games, basic in the formative fife of most
Americans, from childhood up, the American way of reasserting
individuality, an ideal way of gaining worth by self-mastery ana
co-operation. While American athletics are distinjnusbed by fine
and complicated technique, it is in America too, that group and
Individuals and firms in the motion picture industry contributed freely
In time, service and money to the entertainment program. Above Is a
group cl film stars discussing a play under way tor the soldiers. At
the right is Hiss Margaret Wilson giving cigarettes to soldiers titer
isbijhtiurj Ilriment.
ifrtrrhntbm f-mri S«r-‘
% Mnfharfic*•htrrg. Qhl~
Inig Stores. Locally a'
. X-’ha rquicy;—Atl vertlse-
G«*t free
Imi| Corup’ii
* ; '>ld l.y all
8UnE AND QUICK RELIEF
filnmach itlsti-es- goes In fly
minutes, it.' n. Pnlnier * Son
iitarnntttlrilfjwf# to relieve lei
'IlKrntlpn or rny ittnmarh trunldc
or motiey, b.i'v.—Advertisement*
natural tendency to divide its athle
tics between the great majority the
“Ism," cn .the one hand, and the
actual team! on the other. The goal
was t» make participants of all.
There were gathered in the sum
mer of '1917 in therl6 officers’ train
ing camps those who were to be
jSiof officers. Here the YM.CA.
sent some"'of its foremost physical
directors. They were pioneers,
thrown largely on their own re
sources, but pioneer* in fertile terri
tory where they'won from future
officers that cooperation which ulti
mately produced the gigantic total
oT 75,000,000 participants in various
games at home and overseas.
With congenial occupation pro
vided for leisure time, the great
majority of soldiers freely ebose
it in preference to indulgences. They
found contests and games so ar*
were tbe budding of the Pershing
Stadium near Paris and the holding
there of the great games which hare
had a volume devoted to them—
"The Inter-Allied Games.*
There were many other forms of
entertainment One phase has had
still another volume gi.cn to it,
“Entertaining the American Army,"
published by Association Press in
1921. Winthrop Ames said: “En-
tertainment has been discovered to
be not a luxnry but a necessity—as
vital as sugar or food." And Augur*
tus Thomas put it: "At neouary
as a change of air in a roomy Ames
and Edward H. Sothem/rrtumirig
from France, reported-bn April 21,
191S, to the largest group of the
theatrical profession ever brought'
together. The result was tie or-
time were concrete. It' made better soldiers,
fostered moral fitness. In the picture above a
Ess proscription which
ATE pud > TERMA-
to thosa t^rtuod by
mass games have had their largest development.
The moment that the young men of America began to be drawn
into the cantonments it became necessary to provide entertainment
and relaxation. This task was relatively as formidable as organiz
ing the military undertaking: both had to be achieved on an un
precedented scale. Officers had neither time nor experience for
directing'recreation, so the problem |became one for the welfare
^Maammi/STRAWT COVLD NOT be endured
PrheWftBl. Of the recruit e«« to to left to to own resources
ranged that not the picked men of •
group but all the men were matched
against all of a simitar group.
The major results were concrete.
They, contributed directly ahd ».
mediately to tlic primary task They
helped to make good soldiers. They
increased physical agility, sthraflated
the fighting spirit, promoted tam
lassificatioti
And Income Tax
Urged By Walker
montinu.d From Paco On.)
m
.irgia not only- hove
iiis* lves ae in favor
»th er property not
, w on the tax hooks, were reeom-
'ii-nded !»' the B<lvernor.
• «n three elections the people oi
expressed
of thesu.
a |^o themselves ir
.ir of f^d|rxt iKHiks for ele-
ntary prnMf ot schools and gen
„is trenfi®t» and. "aquan
il” for federate Veterans
\ luxury ttt increased tax
insurqr.t^''nn>anles were alp;
reeoimnemied by the Governor, win
also* suggested that the f’ounfy *ta>
rate bejimited. -
The Governor urged the As
sembly that if it reached the con-
elusion that It could not complet*
the work of solving the taxation
question in fifty days, to take up
vther Importnat matters so that i
could adjourn early to inn ice pos
sible a;i extra session later in the
year without additional expense
the tax payers.
don’t remember, ever having
better in my life than I d»
* taking Tanlae," recently sab
O. B. McBride, highly es
ud resident «»f 1224 Thirteentl
t Northwest, Washington, D
months I haul fob
had no appe
ilght ni ltho tfme
Condition I Avat
ken ill with influenza and con
iff I to my bed for three weeks.
• After in* ciiln was dismissed
Kin taking Tanfiic, and in r
mrt time I wanted to rat nil th*
m«*. My strength returned re
markabiy quick and nev n bottle
inrreased my weight 15 |founds.
Mildn’t ask for fietter health than
enj**y noty and my only regret i
Kit I did £ot.tnk4 Tanlac long be
>r«* I did, as j Relieve it wooid havu
lilt me up und kept nie from hav
inc the 'fill-/* , •
Taaiaq ip|or.i^le by ;iU..goo('
ilrugglsta. Accept no substitute
vef .17 million battles sol<lmj»^t«3.
Tnnlac Vegetable I’llla are No-
ire's own remeily for constlpa
on. For sale everywhere.—Adver-
ilsfinent. ■
from the activities of every civic
and community endeavor that
Irises.
HEATED
DISCUSSIONS
The resolution that precipitated
'he dlfn'.iR.slon, which was enliven-
°d l»v a highly Interesting-speech
by “Fuzzy” WoodiAff qf Atlanta,
was referred lo a committee for
reference back to the next con
vention.
Several resolutions offered by the
legislative com in it tee "wore adopt
ed. one directed* nt the National
government to draft all man, com
mercial and money power in the
emergency of a way. One address
ed to the state Inw-ninkinr autho
rities was to mnko Armistice Day
* loeal holldnv In Georgia am! stir
another would make It a misde
meanor to unlawfully wear tho Le-
^Ino in (inn or Insltna In this stnte.
<^llff Hatcher of Wnvneshoro rose
trt ••♦’’te that he would Introduce a
WM In the house Monday to this
effect.
It was recomnifnded that Cong,
ress pass a law raising tho mini
mum of the regular nrmv tf) 1!I.00a
efffeem and 16O.M0 enlisted men.
Georgia senators and representa-
ves were urged to rrinnort this
ensure. Another directed to the
National congress was to retire en
listed men with 25 years' servlrf
'nstead of thirty on compensation.
WEEKLY WEATHER
WASH IN’ fiTO.N'. — Tempenture*
er<> generally somewhat below nor*
al over the cotton states except In
Mrs. J. L. Newborn of Valdosta, southwest portion and along the Im**
newly elected head of the Aux- mediate Atlantic coast where season-
diary, •"osjiondod to the cotiven- aide rains were rather frequent in
t!on call Thursday morning while eastern portion of the belt with
report of the Auxiliary's growth hcay to excessive rainfall in east
n the state was reported :s In. I gulf section.
rraslng from last year from X09 to j Cotton made fairly good to very
1457, the second largest unit Ip the Ignoul p^pgress in Texas eveept late
. 8., being In Savannh. iplante in dry sections made poor
The Graves Endowment fund fo* J progress. Progress and condition
the Department was * announced j fairly good In Oklahoma but crop
'.nlete. A resolution was passed continued late while very good ad
ducing the regulation of boxing 4 ,vance was made in most of Arkan-
BE RID OF THAT
ACHE
if you are a uuffortr with lam*
irk. backache, dizziness, nervous-
*•8.** ami kidney disorders, whj
"n't you try the remedy that yt»u
wn neighbors r< commend. Ask
ear neighbor.
R- I*. Wilson, Insurance business
17 Golhgo Avo., Athi ns, says
"'•mo years ng«v I had bad spell}’
f kidney >v«Mfr(fo. It was brought
n by the 1 mttliro of my work a.*
was on my frot a great deni. Mj
uek hurt'Mo could hardly do m'
w "«*k. jMy Kidneys did not ac*
ritcht and as b friend advised m? t
y Dean'll HWnvy I*ll)« ! git some
1 I’alnur Drug Store an-
couplo boxes cured mo up ii
•°d shape. ‘ I-hove hud no furthc
trmildo from my fildrcyn and I'cat
commehil tvS.4n‘s to anyone whu
'"era ns'7, ijj^f
The above statement was giver
April 0, 131R ami on December 10
b'l'l, Mr. Wilson added: “Po/tri’
v"dney pnw nre n fine kidney
led Icin’* and I. am glad to say .*
"od werd for the n e\Tn though '
•tv» had Mr*'occasion to use them
gladly qonflrm mj’ former nt r it:’
Me at jilf f^aiers Foster-Mi’
"irn Co.. ,>tfrn, Buffalo, N. V.
Don’t 'Have Goitre
Virqinla Lady Tells of Relief
Was Nervoiig Wreck, Short e
Breath - *nd Heart Was Bad
Gained 20 no**ndt Liniment Used
Mrs. G. AV.nttrrfshn. J^awsvlllc
Va., says she «v|Il gladly wife hov
^he %%•?,.•« AflMmFnf'her r^dtre ai
,(, i t irrihle svmptnma by >’.,r| Mi
At the beginning s of the morning
session the retiring Commander,
Rodney Cohen and his two aides,
Si>encer Hart, adjutant of the state
department am} E. B. C. Danforth,
assistant adjutant, all of Augtista,
were preiX^ted with loving cups
with appropriate ceremonies.
The committee named to select
the oup for Commander-Cohen was
composed of Edgar B. Dunlap of
Gaineiville, chairm&h; George
"Kid” Woodruff of Columbus, and
Wes Graham of Suvannah.-
The cups .were presented by Ro K
ert Troutman of Atlanta post num
ber one. Commander Cohen tttRl his
aides were praised highly by Mr.
D URING the month of July a service representative of this
1 company will cal! at the home (and place of business) of
each of our customers who are users of electricity and
gas to ascertain the nature of service and the kinds of appliances,
both electric and gas, which arc being used.
This survey is being made for the purpose of finding out from
each of our customers whether our service—electrical and gas—
is being rendered satisfactorily, and is made by the company for
your benefit. We arc desirous of rendering a perfect scrvjco,
and expect to make such improvements where necessary as will
enable us to do this.
We must first find out the nature of. the service you- receive,
and this depends frequently upon the kind and condition of 11W8
appliances used. The* amount of electricity and gas consumed is
often due to improper adjustments or improperly inkalieif ap
pliances. Trouble found to be in our transmission lint's dr mains
must be ascertained frequently from the customer’s service:'
The full cooperation of our customers in helping us make this
survey is requested and will be highly appreciated.
ATHENS RAILWAY & ELECTRIC CO.
KING’S NaTREATMENT
: f \«5