The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, July 11, 1923, Image 5

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'VFDNE»»^Y f JULY-It—1M*. - : TBB'BAimBt-mtBAm. ATHBTB. GEORGIA Around Athens Kick High and Be Well With Col. T. Lorry Gintt Umazin oBanist MESSRS. CAMPBELL & Bar- row have the best proposition for * city park w e have as yet seen. They have s plan made of the pounds and which shows what can ^be done. This tract contains 46 .acres and is out the Jefferson road, • adjoining: the city limits and near .the street car line. There are ten or a dozen springs on the tract sftti a wading pool for children and lake can be had. There is ample space for a fair ground, a tourist camp and all public enterprises as Athens may need. The stock yard, belonging to the city, adjoins this tract. It would be a good idea for our council and clubs to investi gate this property. Marvelous Discovery Smooths Away Every —Almost Like Magic CAPONS are bringing 50 cent*, per pound and they can be made ,to weigh twelve or more pounds. I They also make good brooders for young chicks. Charlie Hodgson makes a specialty of capons. Our chicken raisers would do well to inve&tigate the industry. WONDER PUT* new discovery now makes wrinkles entirely [•cssary! • longer need women fear tho ir lines that roftr them of their mty and found n •<• way to line, deep frov n magic : your fa and restoi freshness < after the first few days yonr face will appear years younger looking. Guaranteed to Remove Every Wrinkle This new discovery—.called Domino Wrinkle Creatn~!s GUAR ANTEED to remove every line and wrinkle, no matter how deep seated, and a $10,000 deposit in the Producers and Consumers Bank of guar- you are For Selenco ay nnd Inev- ith away every igh wrinkle. It. IPs almost were waved ‘S!**'""* Philadelphia hack, tip this firm yohth- - nntw. If, wffiiln 10 daya, y. not more than delighted with re sults, your money will be instantly refunded. Get It Today Why allow wrinkles to add age to your face when they can now be erased so easily? Domino Wrinkle i will soon rid you of every line nnd wriuklc, for it is a natural preparation and works ALWAYS. It is sold at good drug and depart ment stores at a very low price for a package lasting many weeks. O WRINKLE CREAM R. PALMER & SON>. CITIZENS ROYAL PHARMACY. nner-Heraid Want Ads it Point Railroad Company; Railway of Alabama"* 11 Georgia Railroad The SI r Tourist season Is now oh and vacations are In order. Jfoil will bo glad to know that conditions surround ing Summer Tourist travel arc more liberal this season than previous year. Reduced rates aro In effect to state In tho Union as well as to somo points various tours including delightful trips on Pacific oceans, tho Great Lakes, SL Law- ladson River, through tho Yellowstone and Tarks. to tho Grand Canyon, etc. Stop-overs any point on cither going or return trip, t of ticket, which Is. in most casqs, Octo- Let us help you arrange your vacation. Wo aro here to rve and an>* information desired will bo gladly furnished by ticket sgencUn your town or by the undersigned. J.sP. BILLUPS. General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. COL. M. G. MICHAEL says he ould never have built his home on Milledge avenue but for the pine grove surrounding his residence. | Col. Michael says he prizes these pines highly, that he has every tree insured against lightning and storm. OUTSIDE INVESTORS arc buy ing- Athens real estate. Last week John T- Anderson sold to W- A. Roberts of Gainesville, two houses Arch street. Mr. Roberts will not occupy either home but says he simply bought as an invest ment. Mr. Anderson also sold a house for a party In Los Angeles. Cal. Real estate in this, city is getting in demsnd. WE SHOULD NOT HAVE. A mosquito in Athens and will not bo visited by the tileiwlnged pests if every citizen will see that no or her premises. And now is the stagnant water is left around his time for the pest to breed. Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom from mosquitoes. THE YOUNG PEOPLE attend Ing the Summer School say that words fail them to express thcii appreciation to the management of »r,c palace theatre in furnishing them complimentary tickets |tw< afternoons ip each'. week* .during their sMy hi Athens. They iMftt more delightful .and appreciated courtesy could not have been ex tended them. You can always count on Messrs Joel and Gidley doing their full share in whatever can help Athena. THE SECOND annual poultry short course will bo held at the State College of Agriculture, Ath ens, Ga-, July 17.23. This course is ‘designed for those in poultry rais ing' as a business or a side line. TheVc will be an attendant from all over Georgia and only seconds to the Summer School. Of course our merchants snd every line of busi ness will be profited. IT IS PLANNED in Elbert to get up a crowd of from 100 to 150 afrmers, some time during August, to. drive over to Athens to the College of Agriculture to see the various fiels of alfalfa, and study this new forage crop. They ran get fifteen or twenty cars to carry the crowd over. Dinner will be served on the college grounds. We mu3t give these Elbert farmers a royal welcome. Athens Visitors Among those visting in Athen ■Wednesday were: *J. W. Howard, Savanah; M. P Coker an<l Mra. Coker, Sylacanger Ala.; J. N Owen. Atlanta; W J Chevanetl), Boston; Mrs. J. P. Hol liman, Augusta; Miss A 'Holliman Augusta. J. T. Itaesdale, St. Louis; Mrs W. D. Stiles, LaFayette, Miss Mary Stiles, Ln Fayette, Miss Minnie Stiles, LaFayetto; J P. Ttlles, La* Fayette, lh.: C. A. Roper, Albany Mrs. Wny v L. Garrison, Charlotte H. C Walton. Atlanta; Mrs M. L Duggan, Clayton; Winter 'Alfrlcm' and Mrs. AI friend, Atlanta; E. D Bass, Atlanta. , Thomas L. Asl>ury. Augusta; W Newell and Mrs. Newell, Apop ka, Fla.; Glenn F. Smith, Apopka ; C. . Harper. Greenwood, 8 C. •. M E. Burnes, Rome; II E, Wil* lingham, Atlanta; Y r . C. Lokey, Bir mingham. J. W. Byrd, Atlanta; E. L. Work* man, S J. Sutherland, MaJ. Inf. U u; Mr. and Mrs Hargis Gen* sales, Pensacol.'i, Fla.; Mrs. France* Grant, Atlanta; F. C. McKinney Atlanta. Mrs. George F. Trawlck, Milledgt. life, Ga.; Harold W. King, Bir mingham: T. H. Cooper, Mont* • gomery; F. M. ‘Nash Atlanta; T.. \V. Townsend, New York. WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N. C. VIA SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY The Shortest Route and Quickest Time, Through Daily Sleepers. Leave Athens ... 11:24 P. M. Arrive Wilmington .... 12:20 P. M. Lunch, at Beach. Week End faro of $16.16. Athens to Wrlghtsvllle Beach and return. Tlckots at this rath on salo for ail Friday, Saturday and forenoon trains Sunday, during period up to and Including September 2nd, limited for return, leaving Wilmington Monday afteraoon. Season faro of 121.40, Athens to Wrlghtsvjllo Beach and return, on sale dally up to September 30th, limited for re turn until October 31st. Following rates aro quoted by the OCEANIC HOTEL which include mesls and tho privilege of surf bathing: 8fagle rooms, without bath ...... $4.00 and $4.50 per day ' Single rooms, with bath ...... .. $5.00 and $6.00 por day Ooubla rootna, without bath ........ $8.00 and $9.00 por day Double rooms, with bath $10.00 and $11.00 per day Children under 12 yean j..... $3.00 per day For further information or Pullman reservatlona, call on' C. S. Compton C. Maync Fred Gcisslcr Maiio J * Asst. .Qsrv'l Com'l Aoent. a. A.‘L. T. P. A., s. A. L. passenger Agt. Atlanta, Ga. » Do as Mias Ed gar da Horton snd Mrs. Carling are seen doing an tour u day for your health’s sake. That’s the advice of these two At- unta, Ga., society women. They’re training daily. In hla heart, he went Into the Both have Interests In fraternities ird. and with but a few ac- And to top it all. Spearow ha:, beet ices present, vaulted IS feet • awarded the Kc* w — — * ** unofficially breaking tne ’’best all-round oyle Cup. given to th« — . all-round, man In the Junlrj korld’s record. claas ,, --which includes both T atudl« Snearow doesn't wear ministerial **“ athletics. rarb In the pulpit. **I want to Men- — lify myself with my coniregatlon.” ha .. . lays, ’’and not set myaalf apart from . A human generation Is counted at Ihem. Difference in garb Is one of ZI years; a generation of files cov« he beet means of eep a rating a paa tor from hla people. With them r ihould have the closest of contact. Blue-Laws Bad. steadily. ^ rhe .u**y? t8 : l I ll n 1 A t * r * too, has hla - islands near New Zealand are th« home of the tuateraa, supposed ti era seven or eight days. German birthrate is fncreaelni While FTench birthrate la falling gwn theories of life. _ Por lnrt.Bc., h. believes blu.-Iawi bithe oldest living''type ot'aaimal.' •r. detriment.].. , Diamond, of fleet quality ar. per -They .upprea.1 thw do not solve." f«ct)y whit, with tlaihe, o! red “hS’wH. I, keenly tnternsted In hU *g!!L£ n * commuted hi, Work—and piny. She.' too. I. an honor „„%*?*,* OOMltUg Ml rtudent at the Unlverelty ol Oregon, PP* m *0 memory aa ho comport, and nleo la majoring la education, thorn. fine cows to break into hia cotton country’s economic expam-ion la field and both died. Honey made that of fuel supply. In 1922, ac- from cotton blooms where calcium I cording to official figures pub- araenate la used il cuid also to be limited here. Brazil spent approxl- poisoijoufl, it'-.e - • jmately $27.000,000 on. imported EXPERTS SAYS that poizonl ’ does not hurt vegetables. Most RUHR WORKERS people prefer not to eat cabbago etc-, for ten days after being dust- e with poison. REPORTS"PROM BANKS and other counties are that cattle are being killed by eating cotton on which poison has been used. One farmer of Diamond Hill had two A Worth-While Reputation The head of one of this country’s great manufacturing institu tions says: “The man who builds and the man who buys are both beneficiaries of reputation. To the one it is a continu ous spur and incentive—to the other, the strongest of all guarantees that what he buys i@ worthy. Patronize the manufacturer or merchant who has a reputa tion for honesty and fair dealing. Such motives must actuate the consistent advertiser in The Banner-Herald. Th^man wh invests real money in building a reputation for himself and h merchandise cannot afford to risk any of It by advantage of his customers. He must retain the good will of the t ! frU?c ctuvamagu ui « , buying public. Without this, ‘his business cannot succeed. 'llE city' is AFTER the dog tax and has a man now out hunt- in- up stray dogs. Those who do not pay the $1 tax demanded will find their pets in the happy land of Canan. The instructions art to massacre every dog in town whose owner will not pay tho tax. MAYOR THOMAS aays it la nonsense to say that as much liq uor is being sold by booUeggers as in old barroom days. He rays in VC olden times Athens alone sold ss much as 5,000 gallons of whis key a day, when big crowds were in town, and he doubts if all the blind tigers in Georgia sell thsl amount. There i» a wide-spread demand for good teachers and many coun ties cannot supply >11 their schools. This shows the value and impor, tance of our Summer School. THE NEW HIGHWAY passing rough Hartwell and Athena will _j!raped Route “A." It is now be ing posted from Florida to the North Carolina mountains- The headquarters will be at Asheville. This route runs from Miami and St, Petersburg, Fla- to Asheville, and then branches off to Knoxville, Cincinnati, and Chicago in the west, and Washington and New York on the east. When completed it will be the longest scenic high- j way in the United States. A. N.J a director in the new association. I Alford, of Hartwell, has been made' It is high time that Athens wi up and doing. ADOPT GARDEN ESSEN, Germdny—When thi German workers In the Ruhr, fol lowing their policy of passive re- sl«tAnce, declined to work for tho French and the Belgians, they turned in large humbers to market gardening. Sixty thousand rail road employes alone quit work, and many of them turned to field activities IFilm year ntttn h rniy Is pith, will It Ittk likt tilt— Tinfttd MU MU-Otn. Will fntittd—ttrly mtturint tup j prtptr ftrtili-Mim tni wmil nntnl Beating the Boll Weevil THOUSANDS OF TOURIST ears will go over the new National Highways passing through Athens snd we should have one of the finest tourist camping grounds in the south ready by fail. Hartwell and other towns on the line arc preps ring for this travel, WE HAVE TALKED to a num ber q( farmers and evary man who has used poison says he can find weevils in hia cotton. We are ruing to make a crop this year if the fight is kept up. Every cotton grower will want this free book which shows how the weevil has been controlled—how cotton is grown at a profit by-fertilizing liberally and dusting with Calcium Arsenate. On'57 farms, twice as much cotton or more was producedper acre on the dusted side of the field. The gain due to dusting was 295 lbs. seed cotton per acre as an average for all demonstrations. The entire result of these 237 tests have been putinto book let form. This book gives valuable sug gestions on cotton culture under boll wee- Every time he advertises in The Banner-Herald he puts his reputation in your hands. His products or the wares he has for sale must make good. His service must be advertised. That is why it pays to read Banner-Herald advertisements, to deal with Banner-Herald advertisers and to buy advertised goods. Y tM « Yvbrth yppr white * read BaitmeT-H^ald advertise DUTCH NEW GUINEA FACES RACE SUICIDE CHICAGO.—In nineteen years the population of - Dutch New Guinea has decreased from 40,000 to 5,000 and this province faces race suicide, declares the Rev- Bruno Hagspiel. of Techney, III., back after a two months’ Inspec tion of the Catholic mission fields in the South seat. Disease and epidemics have wrought havoc with the natives who ■till attribute their' misfor tune to t|ie evil spirits, the Rev. 'HE weevil has been beaten by con- slu'sive tests on 237 farms and in 43 Afferent Southern counties. On each farm, tests were conducted upon ten acres of uniform land, planted to cotton, fertilized and cultivated by thi farmers. Upon the appearance df the weevil, half ofp^ch field or five acres, was dusted with sum Arsenate. The other half was not. Complete and accu rate records were kept. The increase in yieMranged from 100 to more than l r 000 lbs. seed cotton per acre. vil conditions—tells how you can beat the weevil. ' ni '' 1 1 These exhaustivedemonstrationswerecon- ducted by our own Service Department, but upon actual farms with farmers doing the work. This booklet which gives the correct methods and all the facts will be sent free upon request. Agricultural Service Bureau /£fi VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL CO. il raid. V- .’BPUBL h.niM IMPORTS INCREASE . Home OrncE; Richmond, Virginia THE SOUtHERii COTTON OIL CO. 3 J Atukta,GtoaciA • v! •J" A>1 '- ,J "‘ :>(il fina l bhioSn ■ih-.itr ra.