The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, July 22, 1923, Image 3

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kr V DAY,JULY. it, lm. Tin! BANNER-HWRALn. ATHENS. GEORGIA OCIETY — By MRS. ALICE ADAMS — ReiidencB 832 |SES NORA FORTSON ELIZABETH PHILLIPS ilRE HONOR8 vent of last week was the f siven by -Miss Ceno Ilarks- in honor of Miss Elizabeth ips. of Atlanta, and bliss Nora sou of Atbensr who are tho |t» ot Miss Anita llurke. ero placci) on tho beau- I lawn where: the games of and rook' were jilayed. guests were Miss Anita and guests. Misses Phillips | Ki.rtson, i-MJss Margaret Nash guests, Misses Jennie Mae and Claire Harlan .of Cal- little daughter Hazel are spending the week end in Atlanta. Mrs. Jim Burch and children, Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Polger will re turn front Lakemont Monday.' -B- Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Conway are spending sometime in North Geor- Epworth League News gia By H. CURTIS STEPHENS On the night of July 8.the Ep- worth League at’ Young Harris Methodist church had charge of the services at the regular preaching hour. A program was planned sometime before and the preachei kindly consented that the League should give the program. Their program, not being on any certain subject, consisted of sev eral new songs, a dialogue, • poems, and some readings. One reading was especially pleasing to the au dience. This reading was given by Miss Pauline Bracket, arid was on the subject of praising God. The League had charge of the services again on the night City and will July 15 . and ft good P ro ® ram wae islt New York nnd other point* l» r i** n t e . d * The many friends of Mrs. J. \ Darwin regret very much her ac cident Saturday morning when she sustained very painful injuries and is at the' General hospital for treatment. Hg— Mp * Lerny MIphael leaves this Mis. Catherln Sprlnit and n,ornlnK " lth Mr. and Mrs. Simon f7 lc , e 1 f »K"‘n •>■> t ' Si Bertie Lee llrck r fnr A,,:iml " 1 ‘"' 1 will Ju * » « 0011 miss ueruo Lee Dreker. {visit New York nnd other I" The aim of the program w; CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Samuel J. Cartledge, pas tor. Mr. J. T. Dudley, Superintend ent of Sunday School. Mr. Hu®rh L. Hodgson, organist and director of music. Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Preaching by the pastor 11 a. m. and 8:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor Societies and.7:30 p. m. A cordial invitation to students and strangers. (Continued from page one.) Kilzabeth Murray of Newnan, ! before returning home, t of Miss Helen Quin, Misses — r* and Cornelia Roberts nnd j Mr. Rufo Turner returns I Miss Mary Reeves, of Elber- j night from Virginal where with Miss Sarah Boyd Sims and j.Mrs. Turner he has been visiting ta, Misses Emily Cloud, of relatives and from there they,went |ngton, and 'Marie. Boyd m and Misses Mary Cado, s Johnson, Emwynn Neal. • Richards; Emmie Flcklen, Wynne, Mary Wright and ord Iuitlmer, Cora New, Pene- Willis, Dorothy Dyson, Annie |ning. Sarah Frances Anderson. avenue - i Latimer, Mrs. Arlie New, Mrs. Johnson, .Jr., and -Howard n.—Washington News Re- NORA FORTSON ARES HONOR8 event of last week was. the given by Miss Clifford Lat- |r Saturday afternoon when she pertained In |onor of Miss Eliza- 'Murray, of Newnan and Miss ■zibeth Phillips and Miss Nora jFrtson. the guests of Miss Anita to Cleveland Ohio to visit Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Turner. Mrs. Tur ner will prolong her stay several weeks. - -w- Mr. nnd Mrs. T. L. Mitchell have returned to their home on Hancock Dr. A. TL Patton left last'week for Tybee Island. Miss Pauline Alien nnd Miss Willie Mary Knight of Monroe are spending the week end In the city Mr. W. F. Dorsey leaves, this morning for n business trip to Irke. leautiful summer flowers artls- lly arranged were used to dec- ite the hom4. ’hose invited besides the honor (»ts were Misses Gene Barks- Dorothy Dyson, iCora * New, ah Frances Anderson. Laura Imer. Evelyn-Wynne, N Winifred use, Wills,. Mgr? frlcklen, Sara , I Sims and Cornelia Roberts ! her guests, Misses Ida Roberts, 1 rabeth Adams and Mamie ves.—Washington News Re. ORTANT NOTICE he notes on Miss Bacon’s Biblo dy Class will appear in next , day’s Banner-Herald. , High Point, N. C. Miss Hessie Lawrence of Atlan ta is spending the week end with Miss Alice Yearwood. Jacobs freed SAN DIKGO—Dr. Louis K. Ja cobs. charged with the murder of Miss Fritz! Mann, wel Iknown dancer at a nearby bench resort. Inst January was found not guilt by the jury in the case. tc show the people what we are try ing to do In the League, and to show the advantage, comfort and power of earnest prayer. These programs seemed __v ... to that effected Friday night are wards nnd sending for them nfter they have been caught in other sections of trie state or country cost the county no little amount of money—nltnost enough to lay n foundation for the new Jail—per haps more, citizens point out. Three of the prisoners who es caped in the two deliveries priof * j 1 PAGE THREE Mary Craig Piqueron’s Recital Delights Large Audience of Music Lovers The music lovera of Athens and both last nigjit will look forward the students of the University j eagerly to the next recital on Summer School who attended the (Monday evening at tho University recital by Mary Craig Piqueron at chapel. The summer school of the orium Friday evening University of Georgia is doing ed by one ot tho most ' nuc )‘ mon ’ th “» young *«“*«■»• >t la giving to those >n<orJ o the season. , amc B tu«IentB tho insplrntlon, the * m . JS"* spiritual uplift nnd mental bracing .1 Air, Oh Sloop Why thUt ran come only from contact Leave Me" and from it note, it was evident ger was in splendid as the program titl ed a many sided brll- tli.Ht with things of everlasting beauty —music. Mary Bondurant | ron Is a singer who r gracious smile, the youth, the dramatic which sHe colors her a to her singing an im- ,Iow we Iovo a bravo soldier. Wr sal, and the audience are Bfted out of the common, nor- her to their hearts. mal statc of mind when wo read \ "My Mother Bids Me * or hear ot th ® gallnnt soldier whe ir" had a tilting sim' encouragement and is ready help us at anytime. We trust that in the near future we may have the privilege of again having charge of the services at the preaching hour. In. the mean time we nre striving to make our League stronger and better, and «r gladly welcome anyone who comes to Join us and to help us. If you have not been to our League, come tonight nnd we will try to show you what real Joy It Is to live un der our chosen motto, . "All for Christ." •hlte. charged with stealing car* penterlng tools; Marion Eaton, charged with making whiskey; Islah Yearby, negro, charged with a misdemeanor. The three men who got away In the third escape this year—that which took place Friday night— have not been found, states the sheriff. The men are, Claude Moon, a negro, charged wtth mur dering his wife at Comer; M. O. Young, of Comer, charged with i ] made of It a gem. In >ng from Romeo and nger rose to splendid the burst of applnuce this number showed the audience had been stealing two is a white years old. formerly bales of cotton. Young am of Orelg and the melodious arrangement of Heine's famous poem, by Rubinstein, Mrs. Piqueron did some of her best singing, the liquid softness of her middle voice brought out to the full the haunting cadences, and she of that not always found gift, the of that not always found gift, ehC gl nation. of English songs, all noteworthy because imbus songs by Mrs. hey found an enthu smiles amid the smoke of battlr and rain of bullets. We feel that we too might be ablo to do some noble 'deed. The story of smiling endurance is always helpful and kindles the dull fire In us until It gives light In our lives and more of nobility to our conduct. About the bravest of the brave passed from prison into freedom In Athens night before last, months and then ytare, this smil ing prisoner smiled and smiled Waiting to have the bonds of weak fastened on her by a dread disease, loosened. It does not seem me that this brave young girl has died, she has merely been set free. She knew the Inevitable, yet she smiled with tho smile ot Inner freedom from fear and superiority to weakness. Even to one who saw her at rare Intervals her life wns In inspiration. It Is not possible to feel sorrow that this prisoner of sickness nnd weakness has been set free nnd en tered fully and Joyously Into th< happiness of the wider life. I am conscious of a feeling ol selfishness in admitting that by In memory,. dear help me an long ai Perhaps sometime, I when life la too much l Fly far and free and joy in that pure realm where Is found. '. —DAVID C. BARROW. WE ARE OFFERING for Monday some attractive hats at $1.08 md $2.98. Mrs. Arthur Burch, 301 llolmau Bldg, Robert l, McWhorter Attorney At Law Announces Opening of < Room 414 , Southern Mutual Building 1 ter. iss Marie Daniel of Bogart, is! Iting relatives at Henderson- ’ N. C., Asheville, Grove Park, Chimney Rock. —ft!— r. and Mrs. left (pst for Atlantic city to spend ■a I weeks. -ffl- r. and Mrs. Simon 'Michael e today for .Atlantic City id soni6 time. —*— iss Amelia Glaaicr and Mr. Ed- 1 Glasier of Charleston, arc ting their grandmother, Mrs Jotthelmcr. and Mrs. E. B. Hudson and W. D. Hooper nro spending »y at tho *'Y" camp near Tal- rs. A. J. Culpepper and Mhp Culpepper of Griffin aro »ts of Mrs. W. tf. Jones on »lll- Terraco.; . I>eo Gotthelmcr and two daughters and Mrs. Marks has been wgth Mrs. Gottholmer several months left Saturday Plqua, Ohio* to spend some *ss Frank Bondurant of Wlndor 0 over Saturday for tho funeral Has Mary iBondurant. PALACE Monday Special “The Woman With Four Faces” Betty Compson and Richard Dix STRAND Monday and Tuesday Lon Chaney ‘Flesh and Blood’ FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Comer Lumpkin Street and Hancock Avenue. Rev. S. E. Wasson, pastor. R. P. Stephens, Sunday School Superintendent. Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching ty the pastor at 11:15 a. m. and 8:30 p. m. Epworth League at 7:30 p m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 8.30. The Woman’s Missionary- So ciety meet* every first and third Monday afternoons at 5 o’clock in •the church. You are cordially invited to at tend these services. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH J seems. Rev. P. C. Morgan will preach! about twenty-two Robert Hinton, negro, resident of Clarke county was also In the group of fugitives. He was charged with possession of whiskey. FIND AXE IN JAIL Saturday morning the county au thorities found a chop axe in the Jail which the fleeing prisoners used in making their escape. Tho nxe'was employed In battering down . the cell and chopping off the window sills so as to twist away the Iron bars. A blanket, suspended from the window, told a neighbor. Saturday morning that the Jail wns empty. The escaping men were the only prisoners In the Jail and they were thought Intact at supper time Fri day night. No one lives In the jail. / The sheriff lives In another part of town. Sheriff Hall cannot account for the chop nxe being In the Jail. The other escapes were similarly made. One wns effect 1 ed by cutting a hole through the plank with a pocket knife. The jail just won't hold them, it Mastic response In the audlenci. nwilllng to singer go until she responded with an encore, "Dann" by Leonl. Mrs. George Folsom Oran berry was the accompanist for Mrs. Piqueron. adding to a perfect per formance which only a pianist gift ed with her talent and Insight can achieve. Under Mrs. Cranberry's fingers, notes become things of translucent beauty, nnd one felt the swift response arid accord that held these two as one. It is a privilege to ljpve In our midst such gracious womanhood and real musicianship as marks Mrs. Piqueron and Mrs. Cranberry and the audience who heard them Thornton’s SUNDAY Dinner 50c Chicken Soup Baked Chicken and Dressing* Butter Beans Corn on Cob Creamed Irish Potatoes . Muffins and Biscuits Green Apple Pie Coffee, Tea or Milk 50 Cents Snpper 50c Fried Spring Chicken Cream Gravy Hominy Grits Ckrrots Vegetable Salad Peaches and Cream Hot Biscuits Coffee, Tea or Milk 50 Cents at the morning and evening servi-;pjij n j nf> _ TT r[rM l re.. Visitors are cordially invit- . r "'P 1 " 08 . To Invade More ces. Visitors are cordially invit ed to attend both serveios. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH •I. C. Wilkinson, pastor. Bible School 10 a. m., E. Moll. Superintendent. Subject 11:15 a. m., “The Will in Christianity.” The B. Y. P. U. will meet at 7:30 p. m. Subject 8:30 p. m., “The Gospol of the Dead.” * THE SALVATION ARMY Special service will be held in tho city hall on Sunday evening, conducted by Commandant and Mrs. George Morris of Winston- Salem, N. C., and Commandant Pemos Matatas of Greensboro N. C. , Captain Curta and Lieutenant May Morris, officers in charge of the local work, give the public a ccrdial invitation ot thia service. Onen air meetings will be held; „„„ on Saturday and Sunday evenings. I o( ptltllpplna furniture which ommcncing at 7:30. Hro now putting out.' Foreign Markets MANILA.—The business of the Philippine Islands must be Increas ed If tho country expects to extend its activities .in schools, public works and sanitation, Governor General Wood declared In a state ment. He said there is a large mar ket In tho United States for the products of tho Philippines, and all that Is needed to Increase business little attention from this end- want to call tho attention ol Filipino manufacturers to llio pos- bilitles of a greatly Increased market for native hats of both,men and women In the United States," said General Wood. "The embroid ery business of the Philippines has been built up from almost nothing to $3,000,000 annually. There Is a market for many times the outpnt MICHAEL <BROS. July Clearance Sale TOMORROW Superb Collection for Mid-Summer t ^8 A splendid variety of Summer Fabric Hats of Fi ‘ " " ' '• " French Crepe, Leghorn combinations, Ribbon and Taffeta Hats. You will be amazed at the collection of White Sport Hats offered in this sale. ss Nell Upahaw of Social fclr- s visiting .at 8ou!o Hall at the cultural College. and Mrs. Rufus iMoss and fly came down from Talullah '•ay night for the funeral of Mary Bondurant and Mra. Winder Wester been called to Elberton by critical illnafcs -of their father, tain J. M. Wester. rof. and Mrs. Robert I. Allen Master Robert Carlton Allen of nville 8. C., ore visiting * Mr. Mrs H. L. Cook on the Boule-» isses Elizabeth and Mary Wood * returned from a pleasant vis* 1° Savannah nnd Bgupswick. Ir*- A. Y. Woods and children returtied from Savannah. " n *** Carrie Kinnebrew, Haze! Uoy. and Kellie Foster ore In n roe attending * house party at home of Mr. nnl Mrs. P. N *eoe. Irs. T. J. Knight fa spending week end In Social Circle. he friends | of JMp, D, F. Thur- ,n d will regret learn of his 1 *"« 'kith typhoid fever. ,fr - and Mrs. Roy Landers and ln * daughurv Frances have re- ned from Tallulah. Michael’s Summer Shoe Sale This Annual Summer Clearance is planned to be the Greatest Shoe Sale we have ever held—and it should be! Here are fine shoes of every style, material and color. Every pair wanted and way below value. ! . V Be here tomorrow early and even then you' won’t avoid the crowd. But you will, get the best selections of shoes to be sold at half and even less than their original low prices. CLEARANCE SALE d>2 95 Values to $7.50 Just think of it! Michael’s fine shoes selling for $2.95 pair—Shoes that were $7.50. Every pair desirable, new in style, fine in quality, good looking and wanted. Buy several pairs. Here at $2.95 are— One Strap Low Heel Pumps. White Oxfords. White Strap Pumps. White Sport Oxfords. White and Black Sports. Patent Leather Sandals. CLEARANCE SALE d>^ Values to $10.00 Newest summer models that sold freely and quickly up to $10.00 yesterday—now $4.95. Less than they can be made for—Less than dealers pay for them—Less than you will ever pay again. At $4.95 you will find in the sale— Black Kid Pumps. Patent One Strap Pumps. Grey Suede Pumps and Oxfords. Black Satin Pumps. Beige Sport Oxfords. White Cloth Pumps. CLEARANCE SALE Values to $12.50 , , .. . IP finest makers—makers known for the finest quality, most lasting wear, most distinctive style. Such wonderful values have never been given in an Athens Shoe Store. You find— Brown Kid One Strap Pumps. Brown Kid Oxfords. White Kid Pumps. White Reigncloth Pumps. Patent Leather Strap Pumps. Black Kid Oxfords, Rubber Heels. Children’s Low Shoes at Astonishing Low Prices : :. MB 111 - I ■ ' SuBwhIHI