The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, September 23, 1923, Image 15

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X SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER M 162k. Ruptured fry This Free _ M |, it U. Any Rupture, Old ot Kwnt, Large or Small and You I on Ine ■ Rood That Ilaa Convinced Thousands, nt Free to Prove This I Anyone *tnmlrid, man, woman , child, shouht '.Writ* at ones to g. Itlco , Urf Main Street, us, N. Y.', fir a free trial of inderful'Stimulating applies- Just put it on the rupture uscles be; NEWT BOOK NEWS TUB pANNKR-HBP A,n at^WE-OEOECIA PAGE SEVEN By John E. Drewry Robert E. Lee, a Play by John Cr.nkwater (Houghton Mifflin Company) $1.S0 Of espial Interest to Athenians and* soufnemers in particular is the new play ]jy John Drlnkwator, “Robert E. Lee,*' which has just been published - by tbo Houghton Mifflin Company. Regarding this work the publish ers say: “It is particularly note worthy that Mr. Drink water, an English dramatist, should have se lected General Lee as the fourth of the great historical figures that he has. In the last few years re vivified on the stage—the other three Ijelng Lincoln, Mary Stuart, and Cromwell. The play is to be presented in America this fall, and we believe it will appropriately open In Richmond, Virginia, d*ur- begin ‘'to* hind together so Jt the opening closes naturally jd the need of a support or truss [done away with. Don ; t neglect k send for this free trial. Even | your rupture doesn't bother you ,bt is the use of wearing sup: Eorts all your life? Why suffer I nuisance? Why run the risk ,£ October. [ gangrene ana such dangers . ,,, . „ . small end Innocent little *' » m . ^ recalled that Mr. , the kind that has thrown■ Drinkwater is the author of idr. on thi operating table? « Abraham Lincoln” which gave I host of men .and women are j American readers perhaps their hjly running such risk just be- j most illuminating picture of the ise their ruptures do no* #urti Grr *t Emancipator. The new work prevent, them from getting |°f Mr. Drlnkwator’s carries with It Mind- Write at once for this j all the penetrating qualities, dig- t trial, as it \M certainly a won- j nity of style, and color of the by- rful thing and has aidcu in the gone days that did the Abraham • of ruptares that were aa big 1 Lincoln work. In a way there Is a man's two fists. Try and | more of simplicity in the struc- ite at ones* using the coupon I ture of the latter, but from it the (character of Lee emerges against j the tragic background of tho Con- : federacy with a sharpness of out- • line and a compelling humanity that are very notable. | Free for Rupture IW. S. Rice, fne* | tt-C Matn St., Adams, N. Y. You ma^aend me entirely free n Sample Treatment of your stimulating application I your I for Rupture. I Name .. I Address I State Trrr DAILY PROOF of Corona Durability Seven yeara of war without Repair! I After hatfctjr used his ''Corona I for official correspondence dur- I i.ig his service .with the Belgian I Army, Lieutenant Tolkowsky Isays: "During the seven years I that the. machine has been I working, I fidvc not had it re- \> ,.C/ N| JULES firTOLKOWSKY Antwerp, Belgium ip readers of “PaJmettoX* Tl^s land, rich with a heritage of ro- inanco and picturesque adventure from the old days of cavalier, ban- r/t and Acadian, furnishes the background fop a spirited, dramatic novel. Its heroine—“Flapie of the Birds” as she is called by the coun tryside—Is a girl of today, whose two great interests always have been her home and her birds, the egrets. She fights for them both when misfortune and conspiracy threatened to take them from her. It is with this struggle; with her trials as the manager of the fam ily rice plantation with her experi ences—sometimes humorous some times tiUfcic—c.3 the one steadfast business mind surrounded by lov able dreamers and opposed by sel fish interests, and with the devel opment of her own romance, that the story deals. Home Is tho heart and spirit of this romance—a story that warns the reader with a irue hearth-fire glow’. A PRESIDENT SPEAKS “Havo faith in Massachusetts' as first published In 1919, short Jy after President Coolldge’s buC’ cessful deat.ngs with the Boston rolice strike. It Is still used as the source book of Information about hat our new and silent president thinks about many things. In it ho shows llnguisitic quality, of lucl dity and patness which makes It remarkably quotable. “Wo need more of the office desk and less of the show window In politics,' said Coolldge. “Let me In office huV<tlti)*> yhe tuidnlght oil for tho lime-light." and again, "We need a ' broader, firmer, deeper faith In the people,—e faith that men desire, to do right, that tbo Commonwealth Is founded upon n righteousness which will endure.' "The Id/als of Theodore Roosevelt By Edward H. Cotton. (Appleton) $2.50. Himself a prodigious writer, the author of more than thirty vol umes. there have been many books written about Theodore Roosevelt, but It is certain that there Is none more Interesting and readable In Its way than "The Ideals of Theo dore Roosevelt,” by Edward H. Cotton. Tho object of this book as pro-' Mifflin Company published a new claimed by the author himself Is f novel by Snbetfnl called "Fortune's 1 to view Theodore Roosevelt from Fool." a collection of short stories tho aspect which Mr. Cotton thinks by Wilfred T. Grenfell. “Northern contributed more than any other j Neighbors,” Henry Bellmann’s to make the former president the .••cups of Illusion." Harold Nichol- very great man that he was—(son’s critical study of “Tennyson." •his ability to create Ideals and I Lary Warren’s “Through Algeria then realize them. (and Tunisia.” Col. F. E. Whltton’s The author takes the life of Mr. “Decisive Battles of Modern NEW BOOKS' On the 24th of August Houghton *^4olcKBv | THE MCGREGOR CO. SUtiorifn and Printer* Athens. Ga. -4*» Just Say Cascade Gin- Iter AIe”Tn Bottles' At ''ounts. - Roosevelt from the very beginning and showa how through Its i*>ur- ney, the great Impelling force was Mr. Roosevelt’* uncanny force build Ideala and live up to them. He takes up the various Interesting pori«(,\ In the life of the man— when Ire was nollce- commissioner, governor, vice^MUdent' sVid ^then- president. He brings the reader Into Intimate contact with great dynamo of a president aa he lingora with his family, aa be hunts In the Jungles of Africa, or as he traces the course of some unknown stream In South America, thoroughly studies his religious life—in fact, the book Is one of the most thorough works of Its kind published and compares favorably with the most brllHani books that have been written about Mr. Roosevelt. There Is a preface to the book by Corlnne Roosevelt Robinson who says that hor brother thought that all religion could he condens ed into Micph 6:9 which reads: “And what-doth tho Lord require of thee; but to do Justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?” ^ 'tome Home," bv Stella Perry (Stokes) $2.00 G. 8. the This i* a love story Ini'! Louisiana lowlands—that country of romance and beauty untouched by the novelist until Mrs. Perry, herself a Louisiana girl, opened it Times." Ramsay Muir’s “Expan sion of Europe," Revised, and "Tha Americanization of Theov •’ore Ruomfvnlt,” complied from Roosevelt’s own writings by Her man Hagedorn. Kate Douglas Wlggin, author of the famous Rebecca stories, The Birds’ Christmas Carol, and man? other heartwinning books, and one of the moat widely loved and read or writers died recently In Har row, England. She had been ill evef since her arrival In England last June, but her death came aa o great shock to the many friends whom die had made either by per sonal contact or through that of her stories. She had barely finish ed her autobiography before she died. Tho last chapter was not re ceived by tho publishers until sev eral days after the news of her death. This glvos a tragic Inter est to tho beautiful words that clove tho story of her life. "The song Is more joyous In youth, full er and stronger In raldd’e age; It nuavern n little ns the ydars «o on and on; but tho song itaolf Is never ended.” The following is tho last of a •cries of two articles on crop conditions in South Georgia by County Agent J. W. Flror of % Clarke: One*doea-not notice many hogs, nor cattle. Here and there a brave attempt seems to have been made to start such crops as alfalftf and upland pastures. I have not no ticed any effort to start low land pastures but no doubt there are a few around*, as I have seefl some Dallas grass growing along the n>adi>Hles, Indicative of this endea vor. Soy beans, mong boans, ar.d other unusual* crops for this sec tion havo been planted in some immunities. Velvet beans ard cow peas arc to l>e found growing everywhere. One small patch of Kapler grass was observed. The lumberman Is busy, nearly every large plantation there always has been some short leaf and* slash pine. This Is being lum be red. ^ in. traveling along nearly every road, one pastes trucks with rough boards on their way to the railroad. At the railroad* stalons, tome popular and other dedsious woods are being loaded as logs. Physically Run-Down T UB DOOR of opportunity fllnco wide It, portal, only to Uio mu who 1, up and doing—who la filled with pep end punch—with rich, red blood tingling through bis Teinr. Mountain alia obstacle, dwindle to ant hill, and ambitions become eccompllehmcnt, to these sort of men. Where Is the employer who Mein the mu who le physically run* down?—The mu without etaminm to wlthatud the knocks and gaff of the hurrying, scurrying world of business? S. 8. B. Is the long eetabllabod and time honored creator of red blood cells. You cannot aspect to get very tar up tha ladder unless you are equipped with a body that Is strong ud vigorous 8. 8. 8. will atari you on your way. Don’t allow tho “Door of Opportunity-; to be closed to you because yon have not the stamina to withstand, the g-ff—because your nerve power la lacking. Build up your system! 8. 8. 8. made ot carefully select ed and scientifically prepared ud time punch! When opportunity knocks bo ready to answer tha colli S. 8. 8. Is sold at til leading drug store,. It Is more aco- nomlcal to boy a largo also -pottle. Cement walks, approaches, ««»«**• fence-posts and to forth are daily be - coming more popular on the modern farm. The farmer, being e go«l b“j- ness men. sees the economy of PER MANENCY In building. s Let us show you how we can save you money on your cement work. t-MOSS LUMBER COMPAKY ILDING > TERIALS orncM vi t *fma • ruLTON •see eeoAO,Athens, oa. -701- A BLESSING In this llfo a sift we are posoeeslns Thefe Mr. Boll Weevil and hi, blessing; v / Althouuh he has come to *tat the cotton And telj ua there’* something We’ve forgotten. v Why did Mr. Boll Weevil come our way. And make all buslccsr a stand still today? Was It because we were living tc fast, • To plant cotton we know It doe* not pay, # For it makes our bank account r delay. We knogr that they are not going to leave. So let’s go to work with a rolled up sleeve. We can’t put them in a pen and keep them there, Because we do not have the tlmr to spare. Shall all the farmers gather Into r band | And think of other things the plant on the land? But of *v\ r plans, this la the beat of all For ua to surrender our lives *• Paul; And. nut God. our Father, first la eyery thing. And respond to the church bells ar they ring. Then we will see wide white faildi everywhere, With the fanners all busy fronr year, to year, Then the weevil will say, "Left leave, leave, leav." And well tay. “Let’s roll down out sleeve, sleeve, sleeve.” —GRACE ROGERS. Just Sav C» c ra«te Gfn- mt Ale in Bottles At ’ Founts. SgH? Ml calls upon us ip. display 3 rare *ndL ornatic rtment : comes : Lcolde rience and from *'Yt profound .. conscientious studyj I havf* been told that acme at tempts have been made to cut up the large plantations Into smaP farms, but apparently this hat not made much headway. 1 have also been told that during the last few rears many long time loans have been floated. The purpose seems tif have linen to convert short time paper and loans that were origln- allv r/\do for 3 to 5 years into Flrieral loans extending over many years and cohtalning an amortiza tion feature. Land values are 'thought to be low and there seems to be a buy er*'' in lands. As to tho cotton crop Itself, f have tried to find the present sit uation as to production with spec ial referencf to the boll weevil. 1 found some fields of very good notion. T have beeif in fields that looked to have produced over'300 pounds of lint cotton per acre- some of which hss been picked and most of which Is open and ready to pick. These fields of good cot- •on are «not* p d as to communities rather than throughout a county. One will travel several mllea ant find much good cotton, then for several mltar more very poor cot ton and prohiblv for tho next few miles there will bo only srasll patches of cotton, sometimes very good and In other cases pery poof In some Instances there will *be good cotton on ono fann only In n community; hnd It Is not un common to notice good cotton on otto side of a rond nod poor on tha other. In talking with cotton growers some of these Indicated that se»- who made or are making ' -ty ceditable fields. I fonnd that gen erally they fertilised highly, cnl- tlrated ranldly and used some method of weeril control. These three factors to te very “n- stsnt, although I saw a field of cot- ioa wilicti indicated a .ltd 0. so pounds of Hat to the sere on Which tho fertiliser used was not great In quantity and no weevil control method had been applied. •> M-iy./gnita-- NOT COTTON BLOOMS During the week ending Bef'*”; her 8th I eismlned many fields or cotton and found this All the sniisres either had been knocked oil by the weevlle or were flared open. Thera were no cotton blooms. All the green «■«««“" Holla ware punctured, slthougn r P'”*" fields, especially those that had been poisoned moet of the speck led bolls i0*» rfpuncturei| In some case, bolls already open and some of the-spoclod ones showed ue-vll damage- . ... Tho field, that will produce the heaviest yields show thwaraatevt number of open bolls at this time. In these fields s heavy fruitage was obtained early In the seasoi. and this was held sad the cotton I, ,fiber advanced. • FINDS OLDEST PLANT IN THE WORLD CHICAGO.—The University of Chicago has come Into possession of the oldest specimen of s highly i developed plant over discovered In Anfhrica. or the re,t of tbo world, according to Dr. Adolph C. Noe professor of paleobotany. The plant, which has been pre served for centuriee In all Its min uteness. was found In a so-csllef coil bell 1a s mine near Harris- hurg, Illinois. Coal balls are men lumps of limestone which torn In a cool seam and usually proven! plants front carbonisation. FINGER READING MORE THRILLING THAN SIGHT LOUISVILLE— Laborious as fln- ger reading may nppesrT It pos- Messes all the delight, nod charm, that iliht reading alvei, nnd per haps It hna even on added thrill becaur, greater nonceniVolloh IHTMtblc, In the opinion or Mlar Susan n. Merwtn, secretary for the American Printing House for the Blind. Miss Merwln Is active ly engaged In the work at the printing plant here, which la the Inrseat establishment ot Ita kin<* In the world. The embossed book, according to Mlsa Merwln, la the cornerstone of the education of the blind. Tha. hooks ot the American Printing I House for the Blind so to llbrsrtei throughout this country, to th< Philippines, Hawaii and other dis tant part* of the world. In the District Court or the United States, for the Northern Dtotrict gf Georgia. In re: M. C. O’Firrrl], Bankrupt No. 1653 in Bankruptcy. A petition for discharge having been filed In conformity with law by above-named oaa.irupt and the Court having ordered that the hearing upon Hid petition be had on September 29, 1923, it ten 2t. o’clock A M., at the Unictd States District Court room, in the city of ATLANTA, Georgia, notice is hereby given to all creditors and other persons in interest to appear at said time and place and show cause, if any they have, why J" g. prayer of the bankrupt for the [charge should not be granted. SO. C. FULLER, r ' TODAY ONLY! Tod *y <* th * Insurance !• the only way you can protect yourself against the possible destruction of your home or toe possible loss of_your . .. _ . ’ •*■- poskibr valuables. Tomorrow always holds tha always offers the protection of insurance, today. Our office is open or we will coll upon you on reqi can furnish you all forms of Property Protection Policies. The Hinton Securities Co., Athens, Ga. b ility of loss. Today See an Insurance agent request. Ws If You’re "Good Pay” you don’t want to pay for the losses in curred by your merchant through his “bad” accounts. Our business is conducted on a cash basis—you pay for only your coal. ^!34J Will you call us? LORENCE CO/ iens. 1MPAN1 INDEPENDENT WAREHOUSES, INC n CAPITAL 91,000,000 General Offices 413-427 Greenwich Strict NBW YORK CITY, N. Y. Eugene W. Stetson, President Vlee-Piasldent Guaranty Trust Co, ot Now York. DIRECTORS: E. W. Stetson, V. P, Guaranty Trust .1. S. Maxwell, V. P„ Co, of New Yerfc. Company. W. P. Conway, V. P, Guaranty Trent ----- Co-ef New York. J. L. O’Neill, V. P„ Guaranty Trust Co, of New York. E. A. Potter. Jr, V. P, Guaranty Treat Co, of New Yerk. Henry Lews, Johnson 4 Higgins, New York Trust iHpmpaiij. — E. A. M an Ice, B. A. Maaice CorapJffy, . Ntw York. Robert Atkina, B. Atkins 4 Co, New York. & D. Camden, V. P, Consolidation Coal “Wtoi /. ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF A WAREHOUSE FOR THE STORAGE OF COTTON IN ATHENS, GA WE SOLICIT 8HIPMBNT8 OF COTTON FROM FARMERS, MERCHANTS. BUYBRS AND MILLS OF THIS SECTION. on all cotton stored and the,, receipts nnd in tha largest financial centers of Wagon cotton will he received at nor office in the Dean Building on where we will maintain sample rosins and selling faculties under rape render Wp Isone negotiable receipt, aa collateral at all local banks, For those who havo no hanking conaeiittoas able to forplsh funds on our receipts, ws have arranged with THE GUAR/NTT TRUST CORPORATION OP ATHENS to furaJvh liberal ndmaces to owners of toUaa stared la ear warehouse at Athena as represented hy our receipts. _ supervirion of MR. a F. WOODS, who will render ovary assistance and service to eer easterners. Ws neither hoy cotton nor net as agent fsr buyers. This assures owners storing, with os Urn fsU and highest price of the market, and the owner receives on every sale s copy of the trnaracttoa with the buyer. Oar Athens warehouse will be ender the direct supervision of MIL A. R. (GUS) NICHOLSON; MR. HENRY POPE wiU be bookkeeper, and MR. ROBERT OULU, branch manager. Ship your cotton to INDEPENDENT WAREHOUSES, INC, ATHENS, i ' 1Wh