The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, August 05, 1923, Image 13

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Helen Martin, ot Philadelphia, is never balked hy a puzzle. By dvintr puzzles she has won a piano, an auto, $1,250 in cash and a b. She has also won furniture which she gave to an aunt in Boston. NOW OPEN 1EE ISLAND — — — OEOfl HOTEL TYBEE South Atlantic’s Majestic Hotel Fireproof—American Plan—Bathing, Dancing, Fishing Sea Pood a Specialty WONDERFUL JAZZ ORCHESTf Rossignol.Kemp A Perry, Prop’s. UNLIMITED OPPORTUNITIES The Classified Columns of the Banner Herald present a variety of opportunities. Information of lasting benefit may be gained by reading the suggestions in The Classified Columns. Advice concerning Classified Advertising cheerfully given at the business office of the BANNER-HERALD Phone 75 v Phone 75 NEARLY four HOUSAND people 1SITED THE BUICK !ho\v rooms in at- "nta on opening 14v TO SEE THE 1924 [jjlCK MODELS. Read Baner-Herald Want Ads. atJNPAY, AU0U6T », 182$. ~ THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS. CEDBCfA i nS 4 tl J? ns .’ but they areflcadtng merchants of his county Plnflijn/y Qfnlsan AmnnJ All |En, seI ' In ?! .JwHevteg that they and section, was in town Wedncs-.UIOtnlllg OCOIen Around Athens I , For ? om “day and met a warm welcomoi T_,‘ .?£ «*> retton the holders refused;from his many friends. He says PrOHl I FEIII1 UrGW With Col. T Larrv r.sntt ;°, r , ty , ? l ' i n ( ts ,, or hett . er - No one can Crawford did not get any rain [ ^ ^ j;Jf what the market will do, but Wednesday, blit they are not suf- 1,5r®. pnce w ?“ ass H®?*. y , advance. ferine and if farmers can keep When the train crow on a Goor* ONE OF nun i a- . nesday * C The UP eJvi°r 0 nmem We ,‘f'' down .f, h £ bo11 , 'Vf vil “ cotton Ula railroad freight returned from „ °. t;R lending cotton, ” c X y ’ thp ™ n ft??™ * i. e , s , tl ' l cro P W,U bc ma<Ie th,s >' ear ’ i Union Point Friday morning after hich started from Athens t’clock they found their wuwluii - government & su S’KSS-S;!»—iiT-* unsettled condition In Europe hat | tearing away partitions and re- clothing, kept In a shant much to do with keeping down'modeling the stores on Clayton where they slept had dlsaji the price. All great farm pro* street to be occupied by Wool- Police are working on th c ducts are declining, and the west-1 worth as a five and ten cents Police are working on the < .ern wheat grower is much harder .store. locate the burglars. • jhit than the southern cotton f planter. [for the staple . even at the price quoted. He said considerable cot ton was held by farmers and oth- YOU DRIVE IT CO. Under New Management J, L. Smith, former proprietor of Dixie Garage, in charge. Improved Service The use of our cars is the cheapest and most convenient form of tranpsortation. General Auto Repairing and Parts Cars washed and doped by experienced workmen. Texaco Gas and Oils Test Our Service and Get Satisfaction 140 E. Washington St. Telephone 661 1 ONE OF : ciers called OUR leading finan- MR. WELCHEL, a prominent farmer of Jackson county, says they have kept down weevils and WHY NOT DIVIDE MY INSURANCE WITH JESTER Complete Insurance Protection £17 Holman Bldg. THE VETERINARY DIVISION Georgia State College of Agriculture will Respond to Calls for VETERINARY SERVICE A moderate charge will be made. Phone 225-R, Athens, Ga. MONEY TO LOAN ON ATHENS REAL ESTATE Interest Rato from 5 to 6149$. Payable Monthly or Semi-Annually. See S. W. USSERY or JAY II. KITING with H. O. E I> T I N G & COMPANY Ground Floor Hainan Building TAXI SERVICE Day and Night GEORGIAN BAGGAGE Phone TRANSFER CO. Phone 66 Office Georgian Hotel 66 attention yester-jfew are found, but they will keep jday to the loaning of alien money! u » the fl * ht - Tlu ‘>' bo" had fine l op farm lands, arid says one would i ra * na a °d a splendid late corn I be surprised to know the number cr ?P is * Promised. Jackson will ‘of such mortgages being recorded If*” 8 7? ar ra * 8C . plenty of provis- 1 in Clarke county. Our southern * ons t0 su PPl>’ Its people, i farmersjiad better be about' [tying thehiselves up with these strangers. Better first try our lo- 1 . cal banks and money lenders. 'These foreign concern are after the pound of flesh and if the in terest and principal, when due, are not paid on the dot, they will be sold out. Home banks and money lenders never fail to extend notes when a debtor shows a will ingness to meet his obligations and seme misfortune overtakes, him or her. i A LEADING lawyer of our city, ! who represents several farmers! who stored their cotton with Bar rett & Company, says parties who stcred their cotton with that firm will unquestionably get it, but some delay may be caused where •money was borrowed on said cot- tonfl But he knows of several farmers around Athens who sold their cotton and left the money with the firm. His opinion is that such parties must take their chances with other creditors. WE SEE THAT gasoline was this week cut two cents per gallon in California, and is selling in that state at 16 and 17 cents. Would like to have the Out strike Athens. MR. JOHN HAWKINS, of Oglethorpe, owns three fine farmp in that county. He says he is working his home place, npsr Ar- noldsville, with white labor. He is fighting and keeping down the weevil and has good prospects for a late corn crop. If they can hold the weevil down this month farmers will make a cotton crop, j MR. JOE HODGSON, of Athens, wrote Edmundson of the Manu facturer's Record, asking why it was that Georgia lagged behind North and South Carolina in se curing manufacturing plants? The editor replied that the trou ble in Georgia was too much poli tics, that deterged capital from investing among us. Mr. Edmund son is wrong. South Carolina hat been a boiling cesspool for a quar ter of a century and North Caro lina is divided into two bitterly antagonistic parties and numer ous factions. We have lived in all these states and know that Edmundson is entirely wrong in locating the seat of trouble. MR. J. Z. MARSHALL, of Oco nee, says he is satisfied that to' keep down the boll weevil Tann ers must begin the application of poison before squares begin to appear. He has one field of cot ton to which he applied calcium arsenate before it was chopped out and it is practically free of weevils. He also has a field of early cotton on which he did not begin to use poison until squares began to appear, and while he has liberally applied poison he just cannot keep the weevils down. He says you must begin to use poison before a square appears and you will then get the first crop, and there Is no place for them to de posit their eggs. MR. MEYER, near Winterville, says the fine rains have helped even old corn injured by the worms. Mr. Bray, near Ila, says they had last Wednesday the heaviest rain in many years, and his section has the finest corn crops he ever saw growing. Very few weevils are found and cotton will Read Banner-Herald Want Ads. THE BIBLE God, add Is profitable for doctrine, for rsproof, for correction, for instruction In Rlghteousness/V-I Tim. till. u - Puzzles Don t Bother Her T HE Bible Contains a great variety of different compositions, em bracing sixty-six smaller volumes comprising historical narra tives, laws, ordinance, poetry, doctrine, moral/and religious precepts written by different persons widely separated from each other in place and time. More than 1,600 years elapsed while the authors of these iiroductlons were engaged in writing them. Even in a llteray aspect the Sacred Scriptures form the most remarkable book the world has ever seen. The wisest and bpst of men have borne wit ness to their efficacy as an instrument of enlightenment and purifica tion. It reveals the character of God, and nature and condition of man and the end for which he was created. It deals with the inseparable connection between sin and misery, the principles on which the Ruler Of the Universe is governing the world, and His revelation of Himself thorough Christ Wherever the Bible has been received, its effects are Such as no other book has ever produced. Character and conduct are altered, elevated and purified. It supplies the most powerful motives jto honesty, industry and social integrity. r The Word of God fills up the measure of our wants, ditecta, con- tTSlJ, Sustains and comforts through all conditions in life. Select a Church' and then Support It OUR OLD friend, Mr. Pete Rowland, of Crawford, c$ic of the and is popular with the aui Mrs. Julia Lydig Hoyt, New York society “leader, who a few years ago went on the stage, is in her second season with the Stuart Walker Stock Company in Indianapolis this summer. She is working hard idiom We have arranged for and can supply a lim ited amount of Hill’s Mixture at 72c per gallon, plus $3.00 for the container. Would suggest to‘those who may need this poison that they supply their needs promptly. The supply we have is limited. , H. G. STORY WAREHOUSE Thomas St Athens, Ga.