Newspaper Page Text
TSB BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS.' GEOHBtt
Ccmint
a «he fa a cl t , W?Cf!Wfa!Jy^fl8.sod tho I manufacturers. Til* Armoui^Fael-
■Iffrf-ft WQlW«fc|MWWBgifaB^nd wouIcl|j n g CO mpiny Is a large etistbmfc*.
BldiM' <welv© ’hcT certificate at 'an E3fTy I The croamory premises are kcnt
- Associated Press.)
MACON, Oa.—The first woman
In Georgia to become a certified
public accoutant is i.MJss Mabel
Emily Hall, of this city, who ro-
'cently received word from the
Georgia board of examiners that
KEELED. Ill 60.
TO
HI. H. BRUCE TAKES
01 LIFE, 1T1S
TO LIVE FOR. HE SAYS
The creamery premises are kept
sweet and clean, no sanitary pre
caution is neglected and tho pack
ing Is done by girls in white.
PAY BY CHICAGO
STANDARDS
Continued From Pag* One)
After fourteen years «? enforced
idleness because of ill health, .1
Keeler, widely known Maryland
^Itizrn. has gained forty pound;
at the age of eighty yean and gom
back to work every day. Mr
Keeler, who resides at 3706 Thirty-
Second street, Mt. Rainier, Md.
gives entire credit for his extra
ordinary rehabllitai.on to Taninc.
! "My stomach was In such terri
ble condition I could hardly di
gest a thing,’* says Mr. Keeler. "It
[would rtwell to nearly twice its
normal size and I would have
frightful pains through my stom
ach and back. I felt so weak,
dizzy and miserable work was out
of the question. In fact, my
frlrtids gave me up on three or
four different occasions.
“Five months ago I began-taking
Tonlac and Improved from th*
Very first bottle. 1 now eat any
thing on the table, have gained
forty pounds, and am hack at
work every day. Actually. I feel
Bke a boy agnltt. It would lie
Ungrateful of me not to pralst
Tanlac." •
Tanlac is for sale by all good
druggists. Accept no substitute
Over 27-nillllon bottles sold.
. Tanlac Vegetable rills are Na
ture’s own remedy for constipa
tion. For sale everywhere.—Adver
tisement.
;hy fedefftl prohibiticn enforce
ment officers, along with his
nephew, and Mrs, Bruce said lie
had boon brooding ever since this
happened, stating once or twico
that he had nothing to live for and
that ho wouldn’t livo long. For
tho last few days he had been
drinking and just before ho firod
tho fatal shot ho drained a flask
of "vile smolllpg” bootleg whiskey,
according to statements of mem
bers of tho family. “He promised
mo only yesterday to lot that vile
stuff alone,” sobbed Mrs. Bruce,
after the fatal shooting. “He
hadn't touched any In over two
years, until Mr. Smith was killed,
and since then he has been nearly
razy with the mean stuff.”
RESULTS TELL
,Thsrs Can Bs No Doubt About tho
Rosutts in Athona
Results tell the tale.
*fAll doubt Is removed.
liThe testimony of an Athens cit
izen can be easily Investigated.
t?What better proof can be had?
• *W. F. Thompson, carpenter. 412
Dougherty St., Athens, says: “Scv-
ej*al years ago my kidneys becuim
free In action. Nights I find to get
up several times to pass the so-
orations which were scalding, nnd
at times I had no control over th*
action of my kidneys. My back
was lame and stiff und If I got In
a cramped position I could hardly
straighten. I had a terrible ache
) through my back and felt weak,
tired and worn out. Friehds highly
recommended Doan's Kidney Plllr
so I got a box at Smith A Rro.'a
Drug Store and they relieved mo at
once of all the misery nnd I havo
not been troubled since."
.- Price <0c, at all dealers. Don't
•Imply aak for a kidney remedy—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same
that Mr. Thompson had. Foster-
Mllburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y —
Advertisement.
W E suppose you
are a sensible
buyer. We wantyour
bueineai. Therefore,
we tell Goodyear
Tire* — famous tho
world over for their
fine performance-
end we giveatnmlard
Goodyear Service on
every Goodyear Tire
we tell.That tire and
that service are ell
we can give you—
but nobody else can
promiee half so much
and live up to it.
I
Aa Goodyear Strvica Stmt fit
Da*Ura aw mil autd wm**m»
BU«rf th* mam GeeJvcar
Cord, with th* h***Ud All-
W*mth*r Tr**d * md hath
“‘n/sasssss 1 "*
Mr. Bruce Is the second fertilizer
xployeo here to kill himself in
the past few weeks, L. C. McMlI-
tural corporation plant being the
lan of the International Agrlcul-
othor man in a similar line of busl-
i. He Is also the second city
employee to commit suicide In the
year. Mr. J. A. Harbin, sanitary
inspector, shooting himself sev
eral months ago.
Mr. Bruce Is survived by his
wife nnd four children,.as follows:
Mr*. J. R. Smith of Athens, Mrs.
Evelyn Stone of Athens. Mrs. N. M.
Hay of I Montgomery, Ala., and A.
C. Bruce, of 'Honnoke, Va. Four
grand children also survive him.
Cream prices are determined
from day to day by the Chicago
standards as received by wire
dally and as published In news
papers. April 3p, the price paid at
Ashburn on the Chicago standards
was 40 cents the pound for butter
fat; the range of prices during tht,
period April 15-28. Inclusive, was
as follows: 3T cents, 36 1-2. 37,
37 1-2, 37 3-4, 38 1-4, 39.
Among the points emphasized In
the multlgraphed bulletin sent to
shippers along with their cream
checks are: Grow your own feed;
improve your herd steadily, build
economical standings nnd stanch
ions for convenience in milking;
observe the utmost cleanliness;
save all fertilizer; feed the warm
skim milk to calves, hogs and
chickens, or, for the chickens, let
it clobber.
Some of the creamery patrons
In Turner county whoso farms
were visited nro mentioned briefly
below:
One of the larger operators, J.
W. Henderson, has 48 head of
grade Jerseys, 18 dry Just now,
with r pun bred (Juernesy bull.
Ills cream checks are now fun
ning a little above ',250 the month.
This Is an 18 plow place, ten
acres to the plow In cotton, which
Is regarded locally as a rather:
speculatively high proportion.
Twenty-five n^res Is In cattail mil
let and 25 acres in German hay
grass. Torn and velvet beans are
planted together In alternate rows
Ono hundred acres Is being put In
pea vino hay. Thoro are 30 pigs
and some poultry. Manager Rivers
admitted that this was ono of the
dairy farms on which not enough
feed hod been grown Velvet beans
are being bought Just now to bo
ground for mixed food. An Inter-
sting nnd apparently practical
arrangement was noted for provid
ing the milk separating and hand
ling bouso with an abundant sup-
Market Gossip
Received Over P. J.
Linncll & Company’s
Private Wire
COL. 61
OF COOPS IN THE
/NEW ORLEANS, La.
pool was tlue 5 to 12 down by New
Orleans. "
up on July by New
York, 3 to 7 lower n new crops.
Southern spots Wednesday were
unchanged to 40 down; Dalla.s 25
lower, middling there 26.50; sales
at Dallas 305; all told 2,159 against
3,692 Tuesday.
Variation's in world’s visible sup
ply of American for week Friday
will run against decrease of 130,-
000 last year and a decrease of
63,000 in 1921; was only 61,000 de
crease last, week. Nevertheless
world’s visible of American likely
to drop under 900,000 vs 2,088,000
one year ago and 4,049,000 year
before last.
Weil Bros., Montgomery, Ala.:
Report remarkable Improvement
in crop in eastern half ef belt past
two weeks.
Texas weather nnd European
political news probably dominate
market Thursday, but if rains con
tinued in central and eastern belt,
reports of weevil increasing are
likely. Sentiment remains divided
with sentiment probably
Goes With Party That
Covers Ten Counties;
Finds Some Fine Fields;
Some Very Poor.
bullish than otherwise owing to
By T. LARRY GANTT
Several of ojir % hankers.an«! 4»us|-
uess men suggested that I *1iext
time take a trip_to the counties be
low' Athens nnd investigate crop*
md farming conditions. On Mon-
lay my friend John W. Welch In
vited me to Join a party of farmerr
from the different counties around
Athens, w’ho would Visit Gough and
make a personal Investigation of
the Hill Mixture.
1 gladly accepted this invitation,
s it gave me an opportunity to
our through eleven counties and
ersonally meet some of the leading
and most progressive fanners of
this section. The following are the
fear of drouth in Texas-'continu
ing and of weevil increasing else
where, but as yet market feels
want of better outside supply.
MARKETS
gentlemen who Went on this trip
V
PfT acre. A few punctured squares
were found, but no boll weevils. I
will tell about this dotton in an
other article. From Gough t*
Waynesboro and for some distance
beyond the latter town wo sav
promising crops; but after leav
Ing Burke county crops again be
gan to dwindle. Fairly good crop*
seen in spots, with stretches
of untilled fields and small and
unpromising crops. You would
find a section where crops yrere
more promising than others,
we saw nothing worthy of special
mention, during our drive home
ward. Considerable, acreage li
planted iii jteanuts. ^As a general
thing there, it a poor stand *of cot
to nand corn Is suffering from the
long dry. spell. In tye Uf.wer coun
ties Ve saw many negroes and
heard no complaint of a labor short
age. We met few automobiles and
told that the boll weevil had
punctured motor car tires as well
cotton squares.
nlng. The
r<|of might,
submergcDciou and transforma
tions almost beyond tbe Imagina
tion. Over tbe loftiest summits of
tbe Rockies the waters have rolled,
and wbat Is human history but
tbe record of migrations, exoduses,
reformations and revolutions:”
Dr. Bland took bis text from
Deuteronomy, 32:11, "As an eagle
stlrretb up her nest, flutteretb
over ber young, spreadetb abroad
talra»h * thorn bCftrCth
Around Athens
With Col. T. Larry Gantt j
The Mexican weevil has cut
short the bean crop, except In a
few localities. The pest has not
appeared around Bogart and othei
carry weight: J. L. Dunaway. Col-. sections In Oconee. The dry wea-
bert: T. J. Erwin, near Winterville, ther is Injuring vegetables and the
J. T. Dickens, near Bogart ? J. B . price has greatly advanced. Okra
Meyer, Winterville; R. W. Stewart, BC |j a a t twenty cents per pound.
It. N. Fields, L. C. White, D. W. 1
Ho came to Athens to live several , . . , . .... .
years ago fro* Comer In Madison P* °* bo A l wh «J* •* " n
««.» tZ. „ I Hcntlnl. A Cadet water heater,
j burning chips, cobs or bits of fire
wood waste, was connected to an
•minty nnd for a number of years
was In tho plumbing business.
CORONER'S
INQUEST
Coroner Charlie Weathely sum
moned a Jury Immediately after the
circumstances of tho suicide wero
related to him and an Investiga
tion followed and tho verdict was
rendered that Mr. Bruce mot his
death by gunshot wound, self In
flicted.
THE TURNER
(Continued from page one.)
ot tho year la a monthly intake of
ordinary kitchen water tank and
tho water for this was piped to
several faucets or bibbs conven
iently placed. Tho water comes
from a tank replenished by a wind
mill pumping rig.
ATHENS COTTON
Tbe locdl cotton market dosed
slightly below the prqvloufl close
of Wednesday, 26% cents. The
close Thursday was 26 1-4 cents.
NEW YORK COTTON
Prev.
Open High Low Close Close
23.05 23.22 22.82 23.12 22.96
26.68 26.70 26.35 26.55 *26.60
23.80 23.94 23.57 23.80^ 23.73
White and W. J. Hays, Arnoldsvllle,
It. Leo Calloway, B. T. Epps, Guy
Carlton, Keeiey, Greer; John W.
Welch nnd Tom Morton of Athens
and Clarke county; G. H. Westbrook
and James Morton ( 11a. in Madison
county; E. R. Vaughn, Bogart; R.
E. Edwards, Jackson county; W.
E. Deal, Oconee county; W. A.
Nunully, Bogart.
ilogi
her wings, taketh ’ them,
them on ,he.‘ wings.”
Athens Visitors
Among those visiting in Athens
Thursday .were: George M. Stan
ton, Augusta; J. T. Whisonant,
St. Louis; John W. Cannon, Bir
mingham.
Mrs. John W. Cannon, Birming
ham; Edith Cannon, Birmingham;
Herman Goodwin, Atlanta; J, F.
Hallman, Atlanta; S. S. Johnson,
Baltimore, Md.; H. T. Chance, Au
gusta.
Mrs. T. T. Appleby, Florence,
Ala.; James Appleby, -Florence,
Ala.; Elisabeth Johnson, Char
lotte, N. C.; James E. Ludlow and
Mrs. Ludlow, New Orleans.
Ford Sedan "As Is'
$165.00
New Star Touring Car
$425.00
Conolly Motor Co.
BIG TENT
TONIGHT 8:15
The Coming
of
ELIJAH
WHERE IS Hk?
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Harris,
Spartanburg, S. C.; A. S. Leonard,
Atlanta; A- A. Winston, Savan
nah; J. M. Hollis, Macon; S. Hell-
man, Savannah; M. M, McCau-
MR. WILEY H. LESTERNE of | e y ( Atlanta,
near Winterville, says he haa two I
.talk, of old cotton that were not | w A jicKey, In>rtll ^ 0(lt h, Va.;
Tcnn.; Jay D. Roth, Rensselaer,
Ind.
mate.
Our party went by way of Craw*
23.33. 23.47 23.10 23.36 23.22
11 A. M. Bids; January 22.98.
July 26.60; October 23.65; Decem
ber 23.23. \ *
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
• Prev.
Open High Low Close Close
Jan. 22.71 22.94 22.34 22.65
July 25.70 25.70 25.32 25.48 25.70
Oct. 23.05 23.17 22.80 23.03 23.00
Dec. 22.72 22.98 22.61 22.88 22.77
11 A. M. Bids: January 22.65;
July 25.59; October 22.96; Decem
ber 22.75.’
LIBERTY BONDS
Open P. C.
3 l-2s .. 100.12 100.00
lordvlll, Warrentdn and Wrens
ml returned via. Thomson and up
the Georgia railroad. Wo left
Athens at 6:15 and returned homo
about 11 that night. Tho register
of Mr. Epps’ car showed that wc
had travelled 249 miles. John
Wolch. who had charge of
EARLY CORN HAS BEEN
rlously Injured by worms but the
late crop is all right, if we can
get rain. Happily not much early
corn was planted. Farmers^ re
port good whoat crops where th
land was properly prepared.
MRS. COBB of upper Oconee
says the curb market is a great
help to farmers. She brought in
somo windfall applea that would
have rotted on the groitnd, and
party, entertained them royally. A they found ready sale. The weev
fine dinner was served at Gough; ils have not as yet attacked her
First 4 1-4* ..
Second 4 l-4s ..
Third 4 l-4s ..
Fourth 4 l-4t ..
Victory .. .. ..
8.12
98.14
98.29
98.16
08.21
08.27
!!
„ 99.24 99.26
CHICAGO GRAIN
Open
WHEAT—
9814
f* fl II' ill T V n I I m Georgia Educators in Afc-
U U U IJ I rUllll tendance At Uni verrity 8g%
Summer School Visit the;; // ... io®4
State Normal Thursday. July ” ” ” II!
corn—
Sept.
Dec.
attending -Superintendent. Week" ^ u ly.
p. b.
Georgia county school nuperin*
109.009 pounds of butter fat. A lit- tendents, who are here In Athens
tlo more than one-third of the »a„n.ei«,w_v>
shippers reside In the small coun
ty of Turner, the others within a
radius of shout 100 miles from
Ashburn.
SCOTT HDW. CO.
ATHENS, (JA
FIVE COWS
AVERAGE HERD
Five cow* Is the roflktnr herd of
tk9 average shipper and somo reg
ular patrons milk but ono cow
each. All must have separators, of
course. The cream Is graded No.
1 and No. 2, but so much can has
been taken to Instruct the farmers
that very llttlo second quality
cream Is received Moat of the
cream produced within tho county
Is brought In by tho farmors them
selves by buggy, wagon or autonm*
bile. A good deal Is*picked up, by
trucks of the Ashburn Distribut
ing company, wholesale grocery
department, which going out with
lends of groceries tako along also
nt the summer school spent Thurs
day morning Inspecting school
work at the Normal School. Friday
they visit classes on the Univer
sity campus In many departments
observing methods used in teach
ing muaic, physical training and
high school tcachern work. Thurs
day nt the Normal School they ex
amined the teachara work aiong
primary lines, visiting the prac
tice school there and other de
partments.
It is estimated that noarly a hun
dred Georgia counties are repre
sented at this superintendents con
vention, which 1h one of the most
Important and far reaching In iti
influence which tukea place nt the
summer school. These > educators
como hero to discuss educational
problems, with which they ara con
fronted In their work, to exchange
ideas with one another, to get the
latest educational Ideas belnp put
In practice at tho Unlvorslty, and
to study, In order that they may
better servo their atate
empty cream cans and pick
cream shipments at the farms and groat work of educating her youth
. ,p| je preaonce 0 { a n those super-
ooodJVear
villages. The greater part of tho
incoming cream arrives aa, baggage
or express. Shippers by rail uso
mostly tho ten gtllou can with an
Ico container. Empty cans are {e»
turned thoroughly sterilised.
Butter output Is running 604)00
to 70.000 pounds the month. Tho
orcamery packs* tablo butter In
Ht&ndord commercial retail con
tainers tinder Us own brand and
also unjnr the private brands ot
soveral of Its large regular cus
tomers, such as tho Plggly Wig
gly and Rogers chain stores;
supplies exclusively certain largo
hotels, as the Maaon in Jackson
ville and the Piedmont In Atlanta,
and furnishes consider Me sweet
frj ’unsifted butter in bulk to Ice cream
tntendenta, la also a great help tc
the teachers who nre hero at thr
summer school becauso they are en
abled to talk directly to those su
perintendents .who nod acetehers
and In this way better make _for
positions for the coming school
year.
The present convention Is de
clared to be ono of tho moat sue-
ceHHful th numnir school haa evci
had, say aummer school officials.
READ
BANNER-HERALD
WANT ADS
97H
ioa .
98
76
'63%
7614
63*4
83*4.
OATS—
Sept. .. —
Dee. .. ...
July •• ••
36*4
35
36*4
39%
NEW YORK STOCKS
Open
77% 78%
34% 34%
47% ....
32% 33
91%. 91%
those who could stop over had sup
per at Thomson. Nothing waa left
undone to make the trip thoroughly
enjoyable. It was the first visit of
most of these gentlemen to that
section of Georgia and It gave them
an opportunity to note What farm*
era were doing and what progress
they are making In combatting th*
boll weevil.
In this article I havo only space
to briefly tell about crops in the
different counties through wfalch
we passed, but in future letters I
will write about other things of In
terest. At Gough I met prominent
gentlemen from different sections
of Georgia who wero thero to In
vestigate the Hill Mature, and
beans.
MR. AND MRS. TAYLOR ES
TES of Oglethorpe, brought a.car
load of produce to the curb, mar*
ket. Mr. Estes says they have
gotten the best of the boll weevil
‘otpid Smlthonia by using poison.
Himself and neighbors follow ths
example of Col. James Smith and
raise plenty of food stuff to run
their farms. They have plenty of
negro labor % around Smlthonia, as
they have hog and hominy to feed
them on.
Coca Cola .
Ken. Copper
Ind. Alcohol
Sou. Ry. ..
U. S. Steel ..
U. S. Sugar .
Notice to Clarke
County Pensioners
On the “Old” RoB
All the widows nnd soldiers who
were paid for 1922 can nnu^get
check for this year, 1923, by call
ing at my office or sending prop
erly executed power of attorney
authorizing someone to sign pay
roll. y
This money is sent to only those
approved under the “old” law.
This July 19, 1923.
R. C. ORR,
\ Ordinary Clarke Co.
FLINT RIVER BAPTIST
ASSOCIATION TO MEET
SOON AT LOCUST GROVE
LOCUST GROVE, Ga.—Begin
ning Monday, July 23, and closing
on the following Saturday, the
Flint River Baptist Association
will hold its first annual fncamp-
ment at Locust Grove, Ga. Th®
buildings- and campus of Locuat
Grove Institute will be used as
quarters for the associations!
workers in attendance and the
services of the -school will be of
fered for their convenience.
from thorn I secured facts that will
bo of interest to our readers.
Lshnll give a report of crop con
dltlona Just as they appeared to
me, also, to prominent farmerr
with whom 1 talked. Except In the
extremo lower counties we visited,
crops of nil klnu: are about thirty
days late and very small. But
cropa are clean and except In Iso
lated canes farmers are using pop
in some form on their cotton.
Almost In sight of Athens I noticed
some fields that are not worked,
but crops nre generally better than
I expected, but very small. Ol
course the Jong dry spell has set
them back. From Maxcya to Union
Tolnt nnd some two or three mller *
beyond the latter town, I waa aur*
prised to see so little land Idle and
crops were far better than prom
ised the last time I travelled that
road. Farmers In that section aeen*
to have recovered from the paraly.
•In that seized upon them with th*
appearance of the boll weevil. But
from thenco on until Barnett Is
reached I never aaw sorrier cropa
or a more gloomy outlook for far
mers. Cotton Is small, with a very
poor stand, and many fields of corn
we paaed I really do not believe
will return the aeed planted. Bar-
party remarked that
NOW THAT A REAL MARKET
has been established for vegetables
and produce, formers should pre
pare to go Into the busines right
On nearly every farm there Is a
branch that will enable one to. Ir
rigate his garden by properly lo
cating It, and he need not then
depend on rain for a crop. It does
not take much cost to build a small
dam and water yqur garden during
a dry spell.
Read \
Banner-Herald
Want Ads.
Thornton’s
FRIDAY
Dinner 50c
Roast Lamb
Corn on Cob
Macaroni and Cheese
Boiled Irilh Potatoes
Butter Beans
Muffins and Biscuits
Sweet Potato Custard
Coffee, Tea or Milk
50 Cents
Supper 50c
Friod Chicken, Country Style
French Fried Potatoes
Pork and Beans
Stowed Apples
* Hot Biacuits
Crumb Pudding, Cream Sauc
Coffee, Tea or Milk
50 Cents
Times of Stress
Produce Greatest
Characters, Says
oral of
Dr. S. G. Bland, speaking
At Opening of Methodist
Leadership Schools,
Makes Assertion.
(By Associated Preas.)
LAKE JUNALUSKA, N. C.
“Times of peace may have their
great scholars and historians,
mon who harvest the fruiti of the
struggle. But the great prophets,
preachers, poets, or,tori, state,-
nun must be looked for in time*
of storm."
],r. S. 0. Bland, of Toronto,
they would not finish those cropa ">**0 this statement in delivering
for alt they would make.
But at Barnett things began to
Improve and until we reached
Wren, In Jefferson county excel*
lent crops were noted and aom,
exceptionally fine. From Wren, to
nenr Oouah there la a thin ridge
nnd as u general thing crops are
the opening sermon at the Lead
enhip Schools,' of the Methodiat
Episcopal Church, South, in ■«-
sion here.
“Wo »re living in a day of
change,” said Dr. Bland. “The hut
ton ycara havo been changeful be
yond all preceder- Tho next ten or
of ua would probably, if we bad tho
choice, prefer a time of quiet amt
security; ail of ua, perhaps! in
very sorry. On this road aeveral 1 some moods. Ths inconveniences
farmers elated that they would not land diatreiaes of such a time are
use poison. Members of our party known. But there is a great law of
Stopped to examine cotton and-compensation. The most undcaira-
found boll weevils everywhere ble experiences have their deep
Around Gough wo aaw as fine cot-. consolations, , their lofty inspire-
ton as. was ever grown. It la tiona, their precious
heavy laden wlth,aquarcs and bolls "
end tho concensus of opinion among
tt» i-ui-ivviiovtMiuiia, tituir ifiiy inspire-
It la tiona, their precious regards. ■ i
1 bolts,' “The breaking up of the next ha,
among been God's way from tbe begin-
Capes-Capes - Capes
In a Wig Sale at
rice
Silk Capes, Woolen
Capes, All Kinds
of Capes
1<)0 lovely Capes to choose
from, navys, black s,
browns, reindeer, Belgian
blues, plain and fur trim-
1. Unoii
med. Choice of every Cape
tomorrow at exactly 1-2
PRICE. Children’s Capes
are included in this, sale.
IV., T. Collins Inc.
389 PAIR
Reclaimed
US. ARMY
SHOES
All Sizes
$2.25 Pair
We have been out of theag goods for some
fast!’ *** * ler - now > and are going very
okTl 1 ’"'’ Trunk!, Suit Cates,
Shirts, Overalls, Hats, Underwear, Hosiery,
Leather Leggina, and Army Goods in general.
DIXIE ARMY STORE
129 College Avenue
J0
CMfoncc
For Buyers Who Want to Save Money on
SHOES of QUALITY
There are SALES AND SALES, but no bargains that compare
with the values we are offering in this SHOE SALE can be
found anywhere else in this section of Georgia.
Sandals and “First
Steps” for C hildren.
Pumps and Straps for Women—Oxfords and Brogues for Men.
Special Lot Edwin
Clapp Oxfords
$4.95
$6.bb to $8.00 Shoes reduu*,
$6*00 to $7.50 Shoes reduobd U
$4.00 to $6.50 Shoes-reduced to
$4.00 to $6.00 Shoes reduced to
$3.50 to $5.00 Shoes reduced to
$3.00 to $4.50 Shoes reduced to
$2.60 to $4.00 Shoes reduced to
$2.00 to $3.50 Shoes reduced to
$2.00 to $3.00 Shoes reduced to
$1.50 to $2.50 Shoes reduced to
$1.00 to $2.00 Shoes reduced to
.. §3.95
.. $3.45
.. $2.95
.. $2.45
.. $1.95
.. $1.65
.. $1.45
.. $1.25
.... 95c
le and Service
PRICES
ATHENS SHOE COMPANY
STREET
EORGIA