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[n’HSPAVt FERRUAUV If-, 1125
■
, I cried right
with pMB* }
know whaMj
\ have done if
{n’t discovered
[acob’s Oil.VjH
me immediate
drew out all
oreness nnd rc*
:nlv every auwy»s». * /
of Kheuma-
m, Lumbago, j.
d I Neu’ral4Ffc'feA diacowr
enitafr relief in “St. Jacob’s
This honest, old remedy
direct to tha- affoeted part*
ike< out alU ihe, pain and
all the mfc«y, ,and doean’t
the skin. (*> #>ay to your
i,t and (retf a small trial
^g^rtisement.)
<T7
The
GEORGE W. JOINER
Athens, Ga.
10:30 A. M.
THE BANNER-HERALD, .ATHENS, CEORCIA.
l U, S. URGED m
Emoar - umveriity ^organlzb 1 for peace,
aoon.r or later wil make the whole *
<ll ,n“ r r P p.j.e better citizens.'
v“ r , p .f-“ better citizens.”
i *?* r j a *han decried too “popular
attitude ot apathy In this iountry
toward foreign relations Wun tne
observation tnat they cannot Ui
I ignored, adding:
Rheumatism So Had | ATLANTA, Ga. — Inveighing' “ D W by day we are reaching
knee* arid* ankles were to against what bo termed America's °*"’ r ^cowing
tiff and swollen I.was r»»ily lack of. a foreign policy "other m ° ro *. fignre and
ripple. than a program of negation,” Bob- commercial power, jut w-
■§ W -■-“■w™ ert Lathan. editor of tho Asheville *‘ n > d «” n = M r. ‘bare
(N. C.) Citizen, utt red a warning °f responsibility In tho effort to
against further refusal by the na- 1 0rgan “ J V 1 ® world -against War.
tion to assume a share of respond*
Clltty in world efforts to outlaw
war. f “What 1# tho consequence? £0
Mr. Lathan with Governor L. G.: J *r as we are eoneerned, tho con
Hardman, addressed tho banquet sequence is that against tho. back,
at the formal opening of South* ground’of tbs work which has
enatem Citizenship conference now been done fpr world Place In the
in session at Emory university. B»*t eight years 8»y the League of
■The dinner was held at the Blit- Nations wo are today the formlda
more hot 1. Dean T. H. Jack, bl- beginning of a new movemen'
chairman of the conference, was looking to the organization of th
toastmaster. world for war. Ql course it 1
In his speech pmceedlng Mr.- jJ^Wj ‘hat this Is the nurpoas o
Lathan, Governor Hardman dz- H*® movement. It i* the effec”
flared, “No nation is greater than noI “ tbs leas. My protest la the
Us citizens and no state has a 80 far ® s America is concerned th'
character greater than th? charac- movement is ns fulils as it is dan
ter of Its citizens. Therefor* wo gc ” n, \ ‘ ... .
find tho root of the evils of our He e»ted tho projected America
(rovrenment, we. must go to tho naval program as a gesture wnk
citizen and train him up in the unquestionably has excited fear i
problems of citizimhio. And I be* other lands, adding!
“I am not arguing against
There is a
IFR|<jIDAIRE
foAevetyfamily requirement
—in home or apartment
fundamental elements of design and con-
Istniction which have made Frigidaire so success-
Ifni are the same in every mode) and size. See the
■new Frigidaires at our display rooms. Easy terms.
navy. 1 tun pumu,.g out mat l
we pinto our r-iiauto in arm*
menus alone, it la time lor ua 1
tako account of our multipiit
loans to otner nations,
“Our innw.ncc nas penetarlt
to tne tar cornua of tho work
Still protesting our iniularity, ta
rest ot the wor.d sees us as risir,.
st.adiiy and swiftly to an imperia.
ism tnat makes itself felt every
wh.re.' You and I know that our
professions are true when we say
that wo aro without covetousness
as a people. But how shall we
mako others bzllevo this? That is
our problem as a nation.
Progress of the League
He outlined the progress of the
. Liaguo of Nations, wmch ho said,
iiaa averted war in tne Balkans
and again in northern Europs, ad-;
oing mat no student of affairs in
Europe questions that it la enor- :
mousiy pow-rful because it has
compelled respect and a calm con
sideration of vital issues. ,
“Tits United States has recog
nized the value of the kaguc; only
at actual 1 memi.-ership does tho ,
government draw tho line.
"Will this continue to: b> its at
titude indefinitely? Personally 1 •
do not think so. The practical
force of events will imperatively
urge us to throw tho weight of out
influence Into the scale along with
those who arc battling through
the league to keep world peace.
"As a practical people we aro
being faetd with a miestion of al
ternatives, and I am-sure that we ,
will not fleet'to" organizo for war
Atlantis Editor Speaks
I Speaking nt 1 o’clock Wednet
day at tho luncheon of th* confet
enco on the Emory campus, Honor
able A. Th. Po’yzoldes, of Nov
York, naturalized American am
editor of the Atlantis, Greek Inn
guagj daily, declared "Commun
ism in its purest sense not only i
n failure in Russia but has bee:
for even years.”
‘Communism In its orthodo:
application had failed in Russia a
early as 1921,”,Polyzoides assort
od, adding that its downfall wo
occasioned by “the new economl
policy” which ' abolished private
property. That policy »■«* intro
duced by Lenin himself, the pub'.i
cist recalled,
EXHIBITIONS OF ALr
VARIETIES OCCUPY
SALONS OF PARIS
Surely no city In the World of
fere 10 many exhibitions aa Par!*
doea, end fop the curiously minded
none with such varied fare, writer
\ correspondent of “The Cincin-
’atl Enqqulrer.”
Recently there ^ere, apart from
oerraanent exhibitions, tho motor
ihow. which drew suffocating
I crowds every day to the Grand
Palais; a leather exhibition, a
’’airdressing exhibition- and a nlck-
of exhibition,, In which French
•justness men aro particularly In.
‘erosted, because of a high pe-
•entage of (he world’s nickel
'omes from Now Caledonia, and
ticksi is dally becoming -more and
iiroe utilized for domestic pur.
poms. V
An exhibition of mushrooms has
Just given place to an exhibition
of cryptograms at tho Muses
d’Hygiene, and an exhibition of
domestic implements succeeded
the important exhibition of food
and drink, resoundingly entitled
tho “Salon do Gastronomle,” now
being held at the Magic City.
When one adds that the Minister
of Public Instruction \ has just
opened a special exhibition coni
sitting of tho principal treasures
of the museum attached to tho
Oo«tu lioiua. and that Lady
Crewe opened a few days ago at
tho Musce dos Arts Decoratifs an
exhibition of modern English en
gravers, you will realize that in
Paris there is always something
new to see. Indeed, tho craze for
exhibitions has reached quch a
point that a group of students, ap
palled by tho hlgh repas or gal- 1
lertes, recently held an open-air
show ot their works on ono ot tho
boulevards.
The posters and shop fronts in
Paris alono form an exhibition not
to be'despised. The most original
shop front is undoubtedly that cf a
cutlery shop in the Avenue do
I'Opcnb where hundreds and hun
dreds of knives have boon used
these fan-'
glit-
taefir
cubist background, also composed
of cutlery, form a spectacle well
worth seeing.
There are, of course, innumcrai
bio art exxhibition8, but a new
permanent okhibltion — that of
Claude JJ:net—proves Ho be a
great disappointment. This con
sists oftwo large rooms in the
Orangerie (opposite the Jeu de
Paumo In the Tuileries gardens)
in .which some very large paint
ings of lakes, flcwer* and gard
ens are arranged to form frefcdoea.
These were left to-tho'nation by
the artist on condition that they
were housed as hew ‘shod, and
his Instructions were followed
though he never lived Jo see the
final arrangement. Rut alas! tho
vast, cool, beaatfiully lighted,
rooms appear not.to show off the
▼Bine too plainly their defects—
perhaps pictures can be too well
hung. i
Another proof of the wide In
terests to which Paris caters Is the
variety of its theaters.' Alexfcn-
dro Miossl, the famous German
actor,has just finished a season of
Shakespeare and Tolstoi in Ger
man, in which his rendering of
Hamlet,was wildly applauded, and
apparently .easily followed by an
overheated audience. The Yiddish
players are giving a successful
season, and the English down at
the Theater Albert I. At this 1
moment the English drama is well
resresentd. for not only are “In
terferenoe” and “PotlphAr’s JVIfe'
being given in, English, but Par
rie’s “Tho Old Lady Shows Her
jjgjidajsf Is having a great suc
cess at the Comedie Franc«»e
under the title or “Vlelllo Maman.' 1
In the bars and •cabaret i Ameri
cans contlnuo to hold their own
and the newest dance i« tho Kink-
ajoju, but si- rival element in Hie
crazo for Basqui
and tho new Cliiquitn bar bids
fair to bo.an otftsandlng success.
Certainly Cp.-tniards understand
the art of drinking and there are
fow districts which produce more
d*ifo*ot«s food than those which
lie between Biarritz and San Se
bastian,
" DINNER — Mcxfcah stew of'
calf's liver: nice croquettes, French
slaw, open apple-pie, milk, oof#
fee. x
Loaf lettuce Is cut in ribbons
and combined with thinly sliced
apples and dry cottage cheese to
make the luncheon salad. * I
. .Mexican Stew of Calf* Liver..
Three-fourths pound calf’s liver, 1
S cups sifted canned. tomatoes, 3 ,
onions, 1'green pepper, 2 tabic.'
spoons flour, 1.2 teaspoon sal
1-4 teaspoon paprika, 1:4 teaspoon
ground mustard, U teatpocn
ground, 3 tablespoons butter, 2
slices bacon* , j
Cut liver In inch cubes. Cook
bacon In a* hot firing Ran Until >
erttp. Saute liver In hot baon <
fat unjll brown on all a’.deit. Keep ,
bacon hot while preparing sauce, j
Pcckar’l m:ncc I'nion*.
seeds Irom pepper an
ilcsli. Ada,onion■ and - - ,
tomatoes. JHt ami altt flour, ?alt.
paprika, mustard, and
Work Into butfter. malt
smooth pasteT Sllr (nlo t.
mixture, stirring orer tho «r
till! thick. Add cube* of lire:
simmer uver a low fire for ten
mtauten. Serve on a hot platter;
with strip* ot baecu. :
"S }
ten
_ suggestion
to parents with youngsters
at school.. .
M nae
TOnili^
By Sister Mary
BREAKFAST—Grapo fruit juico
ccroal. -cream, broiled cottage hnm
creamed spinach,'crisp toast, milk,
coffee. . j •
LUNCHEON rrr Turnips au gra
tia, brown bread, shredded lettuce,
ar.nlo and < 1m-**m* r <la*!. gin^T
drop*«ookles, milk, tea.
fEXT to seeing them in person, there
is nothing so utterly satisfying as
hearing the voices of the youngsters who
are away at school. And the young peo
ple, too, are cheered and encouraged after a chat;
with the folks at home,
'
/
Thoughtful parents arrange to have their son 01-
daughter call home regularly, say one or two even
ings a week, using the cheaper station-to-station
service, and reversing the charges.
Ask the long 'distance operator to give you the
night station-to-station rate’to the town
in which the school is located. It. is sure
to be less than yoy expect.
Southern Bell Telephone
AND JELEGRAPH COMPANY
—fcj
0pt$L
TV
Having renewed my lease, I will remodel my store and must raise
money. Therefore, I will sell my entire stock of High Grade Dia
monds, Watches and Jewelry of the finest American makes at
public auction to the highest bidder regardless of cost or value.
WATCHES
Large Stock of Waltham, Elgin, Hamilton, Illinois and Howard
Watches—Fine High Grade Imported Makes in Solid Gold,
•Platinum and Gold Filled Cases. Buy At Your Own Price.
SILVERWARE
Hollow and Flat Ware, Sterling' Sliver of All Kinds. Here Is An
Opportunity to Buy Silver At Great Saving, Because You Name
the Price.
This is Without Doubt the Greatest Sale Ever Held in the City of Athens ot
JUST THINK-ANYTHING YOU WANT AT YOUR OWN PRICE-BUY NOW AND SAVE MONEY-
NEVER BEFORE AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE THIS. — LADIES ARE INVITED —
J. BUSH, Jeweler
3 Sales Daily—10:30 A. M„ 2:30 P. M., 7:30 P. M. :Q$ P Clayton St.
fj ^ | CHAS.M. MA\ and B. I. MANN, Auctioneers..- \ . ’.“j: -V-- 1 - •'
Remember Every Article Is Guaranteed As.Represented or Money Refunded.