Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1928
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Li s s| 5 SRR eW AL 1
Office Phone 1201 Residence Phone 537
MRS. ALICE ADAMS
MISS WHEELER IS
TALENTED ARTIST
Her hgme paper of Paducah,
Kentucky recently carried the fol
lowing notice of Miss Mary Whee.
ler, who will be heard in Recital
at Lucy Cobb Institute Thursday
night:
Folk songs, many of them un
heard ou:side of the mountain fast
nesses of Kentucky, all flavored
with the sectionalism of that re
gion, are being grouped for pub
lication by Migs Mary Wheele, of
Paducah. :
Miss . Wheeler, who heard the
ballads while teaching in western
Kentucky, learned to play them
on the dulcimer, musical insiru
ment of the mountaing. She in
tends to transpose all of them to
the piano.
Miss Wheeler is very proficient
in playing the dulcimer, an in
strument of the hill country, which
was made for her by a mountain
boy. sess
Migs Wheeler, who has been
spending the summer ‘n thig city
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles JK. Wheeler, left Wed
nesday morning for Athens, Ga.,
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We'll have plenty =
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of telephones in the new home
L
ONE thing is certain---this business of
running a marathon from one part of the house
to another, every time the teleph®ne rings is out
of date. I've arranged with the telephone com
pany to intall a telephone in the living room,
one in the kitchen, and another in our bedroom.
Then, too, there will be outlets in the bath room, .
guest room, and dining room, so we can plug-ia
a porable telephone. How’s that for getting
convenience down to a science?”
‘ “It's a perfe@tly great idea. But it sounds
.. 1 Aearfully expensive.”
“But it's not, you see. The added cost
amounts to only a few cents a day---a small price
to pay for the utmost in convenience.”
Before you buy or build @ home confer with us
regarding adequate telephone facilivies. Full infor
mation will be gladly furnished by the Business
e (ffice, or any telephone employee.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
(Incorporated)
where she will be an ipstructor
in voice this year at the Lucy Cobb
school for girls, She has a beau
titul soprano voice and just re
cently sang three of the Kentucky
folk songs for the members of the
Rotary club here.
“The Ground Hog Hunt” is one
of the most popular folk songs in
the mountains, particularly with
boys. It in part reads:
“Whet up your knife and whistle to
your dog.
“We're going to the woods to hunt
‘ a ground hog, -
“Over the hills and through the
brush
“There we struck the hog sign
fresh,
“And nwist the ground hog out of
h's hole.”
Two other popular numberg are
“l Wonder When I’ll be Married,”
and “*Way Down in the Lone
Green Valley.’ The former is
about a young girl speculating
' about matrimony, who relates that
she has “a cup, a spoon, a trencher
and a candlestick made out of
clay,” and suggests “and, oh, won't
1 then be a bhargain for someone
to carry away.”
Miss Wheeler sought the songs
that were the most distinctively
| Kentuckian in origin. In most of
the ballads sung in the hills she
| found English influence.
: 'ln adjoining counties, Miss
Wheeler discovered the same song
| being sung with different cadences
I and words. In one community
“Florella” was a popular tune.
{ The nearby county folk called it
l “Fair Ella.”
e f
‘ OVERNIGHT 'CAMP FOR
GROUP HAVING LARGEST
KEGISTRATION
I An overnight camp will be
' given the group of high school
. tsirl Reserves having the largest
registration at the end of this
week, provided their enrollment
exceeds fifty. This was the decis
ion made by the Girls’ Work com
mittee of the Y. W. C. A. at a
meeting Tuesday.' The contest will
be between the Tri-Hi’s, Juniors
and Seniors, and the Ever Ready
Club, composed of Freshmen and
Sophomores of high school,
Registration began this after
| noon and will continue through
{ Saturday afternoon, and attention
! i called to.the tact that although
{ this contest appiies only to tne
!high school clubs, all Girls Re
| serves of the:city are expected to
| register during this period. The
'Y. W. C. A. office will be open
until 5:30 every afternoon, and all
igirls wishing to enroll are urged
| to come as soon as possible. Reg
l istration will not -be accepted: over
the telephone.
| ~B—
— PRAYER SERVICE FIRST
| PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
8 O’CLOCK
' The Prayer service of the First
Presbyterian church will be held
tLis evening at 8 o ’clock. A full
attendance is cordially urged.
HIGH SCHOOL P.T. A. MEETS
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
4 O’'CLOCK
The first fall meeting of the
High School P. T. A. will be held
Thursday afterncon “in the Mell
auditorium at 1 o’clock. A large
attendance is urged. :
_.w-.—
MEETING OF THE GUILD
FRIDAY 5 OCLOCK
| There will Se a general meeting
of Emanuel Guild Friday afternoon
in the Parish house at 5 o’clock.
| livery member is urged to be pres
ol
'W. M. S. FIRST METHODIST
eNpßcy. -
~ The Woman’s Missionary Socie
‘fy ‘of the First Methodist church
‘met Monday afternoon with Mrs.
Jere Pound, prerideitt presiding.
' Mrs. J. H. Gerdine gave 2 very
beautiful and impressive devo
tional on' the sutject of the cruci
tixion. The friends of Mrs. Gsr
dine are always appreciative of
the deeply spiritual quality of her
rresence and her message and
fee: that both are indeed a bless
ing.
The topic “Kedeemed and Re
newal” was clearly presented by
Mrs. Henry West, and was unus
val in the strength and power of
its thought. g
~ Mrs. N. E. Martin, president of
‘Woman’s Bible Class announced a
Silver Tea to be given Thursday
afternoon at the church, and also
requested money «nd clothing for
the fall Orphans Home Box that
is now being packed.
* After prayer for the special o®-
jectives the meeglg adjourned.
(C,HIL.D MEETING BUSINESS
yIRL’S CLUB THURSDAY
EVENING 7:30
" There will e a called meeting
‘of the Business Girls C'ub Thurs
day evening at 7‘he s We O A
gymnasium at 7:30.
i This will be a very important
meeting and every member s
urged to be present.
—
EMMANUEL CHURCH SCHOOL
P. T. A. MEETS THURSDAY
4 O’CLOCK
The Emmanuel church school P.
T. A. will meet Thursday after
nroon in the Parish house at 4
o‘clock. Every member asked to
e present,
Miss Lucy Fleming returned
from " Dillard Monday afternoon
and left today for Maxeys to stay
until Saturday with her aunt, Mrs.
H. F. Brightwell.
Mrs. James S. |Devant leaves
the latter part of the week for
her home in Memphis after a vis
it here with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jones are
visiting Mrs. Sallie Hodgson at
Dillard.
: —E—
Miss Mary Strahan left today
for Columkbia University wherce
she will stuidy this winter.
PO
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Secrest an
nounce the birth of a daughter
Tuesday September the 18th, at
the Athens General Hospital, who
has been named for her mother,
Catherine Evelyn.
il
Mr. David Michael returned to
day from a business trip to New
York.
| il
- Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Soule re
turned Tuesday from a visit of
several weeks in Canada. Their
friends will be delighted to learn
of Mrs. Soule’s great improvement
in health.
i
i Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Adair and
daughter, Sara FElizabeth, return
ed Monday from a visit to friends
'and relatives in Rome and Chat
tanooga. They were accompanied
by Mrs. Adair's sister-in-law, Murs.
Annie Davis.
o o
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Wiley an
nounce the birth of a daughter,
September the 13th, who will be
called Martha Anne.
el
’ The many friends of Dr. and
Mrs. Thomas Hubbard McHatton
}»will be interested to learn that
‘their charming sub-deb daughter,
Miss Marie McHatton has regis~
tered at the University and is
probably the youngest girl to en
ter this fall. Miss McHatton grad
uated from Lucy Cobb in June
and is ene of Athens most popular
and attractive members of the
young college set.
—E—
Friends of Mrs. Harry Loef will
be pleased to learn she is conva
lescent from a tonsil operation.,
B :
Mrs.. Dora Gottlieb, of Birming
ham, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
H. Loef, at their Milledge Circh‘
apartment. l
_.[’*’[_—
Mr. Haywood Rivers of Agus
ta, spent the week-end with his
sister, Mrs. 3. W. Ussery, en routs
to Atlanta to attend t*: Interna
tional Convention of Rlechanics.
L nigt Sy
- Mrs. S. W. Ussery has returned
from an extended visit to points
in South Carolina.
— ]
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Markwalter
have taken Mrs. E. L. Bussey’s
attractive home on Milledge Ave
for the winter.
, il
Mrs. E. L. Bussey is visitine
in Charlotte, and from there will
go to Columbus for the winter.
_E_.
Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Edwards and
young son have returned from a
delightful trip through Virginia
and New York. Their mother, Mrs.
Edwards will prolong her visit in
New York.
——-E—.
Mrs. J. W. R. Jenkins, of Lex
ington, visited hére Tuesday.
o e "
Mr. and Mrs. Bowdre Phinizy |
have returned from Asheville anl
will leave Wednesday for New
York.—Augusta Chronicle
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GFDRGIA.
Mr. and Mre, .. 8. Predter have
astheir guests this week, Miss
Ruby Predter and their little
granddaughter, Darselle Freeman
of Charleston.
Friends of Mrs. R. S. Pond will
reget to lean of her illness at her
home on Dearing street.
e i |
Dr. Broughton to Preach
On “The Wail of a
Broken Heart,” at
Prince Avenue Baptist
Wednesday Night.
(Continued trom page one.)
tation or supernatural control in
both instances.
“The disciples, it is said in the
text, waited for ten days before
this anduement came upon them.
They were not told to wait ten
days; they,were only told to wait
until it came to pass. Jesus knew
that it was not necessary to give
them any timg limit, for when the
Spirit took possession of them it
would so change their whole lives
as to enable them to know that
the thing had happened, and when
they were endued by the Spirit
it wag no longer possible for them
to wait in the upper room; they
were driven forth by the dynamic
Spirit that had control of them to
give their tes: imony of their. Lord
as seen by them in this new,
Spirit-filled atmosphere that pos
segsed them. There is no question
but that Christ appeared 'to ‘them
in a very different sense after the
Spirit took possession of them.
The same will be true of any of
us. When the Spirit possegses us
Christ wil be 1o us entirely new;
never mind how much we loved
Him before, never mind how much
we praised Him for H's salvation,
whenever His spirit possesses
us and we are clothed with His
fiupernatural power, we will love
Him more and praise Him more,
because we will see more in' Him
than we ever saw before. The
whole occasion of Pentecost
alearly manifests this fact,
“Supernatura'ly Directed”
“The choosing of Peter to
preach the Pentecostal gsermon
was a supernaturally directed mat
ter. No natural mind would have
ever selected (Peter for that ‘im
portant gccasion. He had just a
while ago denied his Lord before
the sworld; but since then he has
been forgiven, and Christ' has
put away all his guilt and the
Spirit has seized upon him as
the one man to preach the Pente
cost sermon. The sermon, which
he preached was supernaturally
given. A most remarkable sermon
it was. It was preached on’ the
Day of Pentecost, when the 0.-
ganized church was inaugurated.
and it was therefore a great oc
casion. He might have preached
on many interesting and helpful
themes for such:an occasion, but
he struck strietly to the funda
mentals of the Gospel, emphasiz
ing the lordship of Jesus, His
erucifixion and atonement for sin.
His resurrection, His ascension,
H:s reign at the right hand'of the
Father, and also emphasized ‘the
fact that henceforth the Spirit is
to be in contrdl of the chufch, as
Jesus himself had been in control
while He was on earth, {
«RFyerything connected with this
great Pentecost occasion Was ‘su
pernatural. The results follow
ing were specially so; three tYou
sand were addet to the church
in a single day, ‘and the Tord,
continued to add to the church
dafy such as were being saved’
This was an ideal revival and to
o greater or lesser degree can® be
repeated at the presént . time.
Whenever God’s people get ready
to hapd themselves over soul anid
body to be used, directed and
guided and empowered by the
Holy Spirit, that is Spirit bap
tism, and for that the church to
ay, it seems o me, more than ever
should be looking. We are labor
‘ng today in the midst of fogs
caused by a'l sorts of things. and
we are trying to fight our way
out into the clear sunlight; bhit,
alas, we are using to a grea’ ex
tent humanly constructed methods.
The command of our Lord in the
text and the manifestaticn of
DR.C. A. ACKLEY
—Chirepodist—
Foct Troub'es Relieved
—Cherokee Hotel—
Hours—96-i1; 1-5.
Phone fer Appointments
- THE STYLE SHOP
MISS SUSIE WELLS
CORRECT
MILLINERY
PHONE 1377
REMODELLING A SrECIALTY
186 (Clavton Street
LR DGy SR 7 o Tele s s
P MEET MBE AY S
PHARMACY
Pentecost should remind us of the
beiter way. yea, the ouly way,
by which the indiviaual soul and
the church can ,find its way
through the fog in which it is
now doing His work. It is by
the enduement, or baptism, of the
Spirit. . :
et us as Christian peopie
cease to quibble about mere tech
micalitics and give ourselves over
to Him who would control the
whole of the affairs of the King
dom of God for the glory ol
Christ. Let us like the digciples
in the upper room tarry until we
are endued with power from on
high.”
List is Likely to Grow,
Say Reports; Thous
ands are Homeless;
Funds are Needed for
Relief.
(Continued from page one.)
worker, put out in boats equip
ped with outboard motors. They
were accompanied by T. A,
Pledge, Assocjated Press staff
writer. Nothing but. medical sup
plies, serums and emergency ra
tiong for the 'party was taken
along. They expected to be back
late Wednesday afternoon or night
with a full account of conditions.
Reports partially verified placed
the number of dead at Pahgkee at
15 or more.
(By United Press)
The remnant of the tropical
hurricane which struck Porto Rico
Thursday was scudding out to sea
Wednesday after it had climbed
up the Atlantic seaboard as far as
the Virginia capes.
The disturbance which now is
cutting across Atlantic steamship
lanes is only a breath of wind com
pared to the gale that landed with
a terrific force on Palm Beach,
Florida, cut across the peninsul2,
and then veered off toward the
eastern coast again.
With partial restoration of com
munication lines, relief work was
speeded Wednesday, and reports
indicted that food and medicine
were needed badly in Florida and
Porto Rico.
Governor Horace M. Towner, of
FPerto Rico, in a report written for
the United Press, said he could
rive no definite estimate of the
number of lives lost. He did say,
FALL SEASON OPENING
MONDAY and TUESDAY
i @TE
JOLSON 322 i,
MAY MAOY N 33
“The Jazz =)
Slnger’ ; Jsiz’
..Hear What You See...
P-A-L-A-C-E-Mordgans,
Admission---Adults 50¢; Children 25¢
however, that present reports did
not warrant placing the fatality
list as high as_ 1,000 dead.
Estimates Q{ the loss of life in
Florida varied from 62 to 400 dead
although all ‘officials agreed that
wny figure about. 62 would be too
small:a number. - -
Thousdnds of dollars were pour
ing into the headquarters of relief
agencies. Railroads in Florida co
operated in the work by furnishing
free transportation to physicians
and nurses. ’
It was only when relief parties
Cegan to penetrate into the in
terior and skirt the shores of Lake
Okeechobee that enormous loss of
life became known for certain.
400 DEAD IN FLORIDA
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. —(UP)
—Reports to Red Cross head-
Guarters here placed the dead and
missing in, the ' Florida hurricane
at 100 to 400, with property dam
age high in the millions.
The east coast in and about
West Palm Beach and the Lake
Okeechobee area, morth of the
Lverglades, are wunder severest
stress, with many dead, hundreds
injured and devastation beyond
precedent, possioly for a Florida
hurricane.
Railroad traffic had been re
stored Wednesd’g‘y to the south,
Telephone and telegraph lines
were rapidly being repaired. West
Palm Beach was in telegraphic
communication with the outside
vrorld.
Three relief expeditions out of
Miami were entering the Lake
Okeechobee district Wednesday,
Red Cross headquarters reported.
Medicine, food and clothing was
sent in on great vens.
At West Palm PBeach, bodies of
the dead from towns and eitios to
the south and west arrived Tues
day night for burial. Red Cross
officials heard that “a truck load
of bodies” had been gathered
along the southeastern shore of
Lake Okeechobee by relief work
€rS.
While the deaths along the
coast, at Delßay, West Palm
Beach, Jupiter and other towns
mainly resulted from people be
ine hit by wind-wrecked = houses
crushed in wind-wrecked houses,
along Lake Okeechobee, a tidal
wave was reported to have drown
od many. Dykes were also said to
have given way under the pres
sure of wind-swept waves on the
iake and hurled sheets of water in
the lowland towns along the mar
gin.
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PAGE THREE