Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
k. THE BANNER-HERALD
‘ ATHENS, GEORGIA. .
Published Every Evening During the Week Except Saturday sad
Sunday and on Sunday Morning by The Athens Publishing Company,
Athens, Georgia. Wil
e L e e g e
EARL B. BRASWELL ...... «..¢.. Publisher and General Manager
B 0 BN i s nee ventee siey BTR RS SRR Editor
CHARLES E. MARTIN .... «coo treone ssosorey Managing Ediwrt‘
_________________________,__.————'——————-——-—-;
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] THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY ‘
For one believeth that he may eat all things: an
other, who is weak, eateth herbs.—Romans 14:2.
They are as sick that surfeit with too much as they
that starve with nothing.—Shakespeare.
HAS THE RING OF TRUE DEMOCRACY
! The resolutions presented by Chairman G. E. Mad
y dox, of the State Democratic Executiv Committee,
to the members of that committee, at a called meet
ing Saturday in Atlanta, have the true ring of dem
ocracy in eve:y line and put t} e bolters of the Dem
_ ocratic party on notice what they may expect in the,
" {uture insofar as relates to the participaticn in party
affairs. The members of the committee, by a anani
mous vote adopted the resolutions.
The Democrats of Georgia have gone (n record as
to their loyalty to party and clearly declared to those
who have seen fit to bolt that no recognition of party
emcluments will be accorded them in the future. The
resolutions are clear; there can be no misunderstand
ing as to the purposes and intentions of the represen
tatives of the democratic party in ‘this state. There
can be no middle ground in the presidential election
nor in democratic electicns in the future. A bolter
now is a bolter for 211 time to come and the voter who
chooses to repudiate the principles of Democracy in
the presidential election will be marked ss a reppbli- |
can by his or her own act of disloyalty to the vr}art,v
that has preserved white supremacy in the South
¢ince the days of re¢onstruction.
The action of the State Democratic Committee was
most timely ; it serves notice on those who have been
misled by political bigots injecting into the campaign
+ religious prejudices and by coercion, in many instan
© ces, the crime of intolerance they wili commit on
November 6, should they desert the Democratic party
and vote the Republican ticket. e
The representatives of the Democratic party in this ‘
state have sounded the warning; they have blazed
the way for those who have been micled by the emi- :
saries of the “whispering campaign” being conducted
by Republicans and by Demecerats, who are intolerant
in their religious views, to return to th: Democratic |
fold and renounce their affiliations with organiza
ticns and political parties that are unfriendly to the
cause of an honest government and for the best in
_ terests of the South. The time is short in which to
make your decision; the case has been }.resented to
vou by tried and true Democrats; vour verdict will
hecome history, either for or agains’ Democracey.
Which will it be? 3
INCREASES IN BUILDING LINE.
From reports compiled by the Engineering News-
Record, all classes of construction shows a wonderful
increase in all sections of the country.
The Scuth has not lagged in its growth and devel
opment, but has gone forward apace along with other
sections. However, reports show that the South is
rapidly becoming an industrial center and within the
next few years, is bound to take its place in advan:e
of the Eas!, where for all these years, the great
industries of the country have been located. The re
cources possessed by the South are far supcrier to
those of the East in that raw material 4is at the door
of the manufacturers; cheaper and more reliable la
hor, climate, good schools and churches and a citizen
ship of the highest personnel. These alvantages
_count for much with capitalists seeking safe invest
ments. But, getting back to the construction line,
the fellowing from the Industrial Index gives an in
gight to the situaiion thrcugaout tne country :
“The money value of heavy construction and engi
neering centracts awarded in the United States in the
past week was $83,237,000, as against $49,345,000
in the same week last year, Engineerin;?News-Record
reports. Gains were recorded in prac ically all the
varicus classes of constructicn, but thelarge increase
over last year, was due mainly to the awarding by
New York of a contract for a water-supply tunnel
‘which will involve the expenditure of $42,693,000.
“Contracts awarded for buildings, both commer
¢ial and industrial, continue to exceed the volume re
perted last year. In the total for the week commer
eial buildings accounted for $21,007,000, as against
$19,203,000 in the corresponding week last year.
. “Awards announced since the first of the year
were valued at $2,858,298,000, which compares with
~ $2.184,183,000 in the same period last year. The
_gain over last year amounts "to approximately 156
_¢per cent.”
% Georgia has experienced a building boom far in
excess of that of the past decade. Athens has not been
idle in this line. More building has been carried on
this year than during any year since the war. There
are many other improvements in view and in the pro
cess of making. There are a number cf industrial
and manufacturing enterprises that are considering
Athens for their location. With the proper informa
tion furnished the promoters, it is believed that be
fore the end of the year, contracts will ke closed and
vthe industries secured. A'thens has as much t§ offer
in the way of inducements as any other city in the
country. Ideally located, blessed by nature with fa
.cilities and resources there is no reason why this place
* should not be selected by those seeking locations.
The general opinion of the press. of the country
is that the nomination of Franklin Roosevelt for the
office of governor of New York state was a most
happy solution of the condition existing in that state
gsince Governor Smith was drafted to become the
president of the United States,
" 'I“ e pessimist has taken to winter quarters and we
j hopg that he will remain there until he develops a
| growth cf optimism, RN
ADaily Catoon: =~~~ The
. %3 . .
Lartoon: - The Fight For the Covers!
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DID IT EVER OCCUR
TO YOU?
A Little of Everything and Not
Much of Anything.
By FJIGH ROWE
The Furman Hurricane blew
into Athens Thursday even
ing primed to cause.trouble
for the Georgia Bulldogs on
Sanford Field.
The purple and white warriors
sustained their reputation for
fighting to the end and on several
occasions showed signs of threat
ening to register a touchdown.
However, these young gentlemen
failed in their efforts and desires
to accomplish the end, but they
did stir up an uneasiness as they
neared the Georgia goal line on
one or more occasions, It was a
good game and kept the spectators
interested from the beginning to
the end of the fracas.
Mayor Dudley returned Fri
day afternoon in time for the
game. Regard'ess of where
he may be, he never fails to
put in appearance when the
Georgia Buwldogs are sched-
uled to play a game.
The mayor is still feeling good
over the feat of his son,, Frank
when he carried tle ball over
Yale's goal line for a touch-down.
This is Frank’s last yvear in foot
bail, but Mayor Dudley has an
other son coming on who will hold
up the Dudley end of the game
for sometime to come. He is now
playing on the Athens High School
team and displaying a brand of
football the equal to that of his
brother Frank, during h's days of
High Schcol football,
Mrs. Mike McDowell, of
Madisen, has written an ar
ticle on the presidentisl elec
tion that his attracted nation
wide attention. It has been
reproduced in many of the
newspapers of the country.
A pdragraph taken from the ar
ticle indicates the deep interest
she has in the success of Democ
racvy on November 6. She savs.
« ‘“How any true Southern woman
who wears upon her bosom the in
gignia of the ‘United Daughters
of the Confederacy’ can march to
the polls on November 6th Ww'd
cast her vote for the republican
party is more than I can under
stand. Before taking such a step
I would carefully fold that U. I
', pin- in a small '‘Confederate
flag and bury it beneath the sod
with all the memories of my fore
bears.”
A darky was making an ap
peal to a genf'eman for a do- |
nation. The gentleman, know
ing. him somewhat, said: l
“Why, Sam, you don’t mean to
tell me you've taken up beg
ging?” ? }
Sam—*“Yessah, boss: Ah ain’t
got no other way to get along.”‘
“Why you told me once that
vou had a business.” | ‘
“Yessah, Ah-all did have a busi. |
ness—a one.hand laundry, but Ahi
done lost my business.” i
“How did you come to lose i,
Sam?” ;
“Well, suh, de way it was, she
just up and divo'ced me.’—Wes.
tern Christian Advocate,
ATHENS TEN YEARS AGO s
October 22, 1918
Cotton: 31 7-8 cents, |
~ Weather: Partly cloudy, slightly
- @ooleér.
Amsterdam: German provlnclal‘
and socialist newspapers (~ominue|
their camphlgn against the “chief
culprits” responsible for the war.
By Associated Press: Allied
troops on the mnorthern end of
the front'in France and Belgian
lmdny are driving into the Ger
{ man line from west of Ghent past
Tournai to Vaienciennes. This is
L the line of the Scheldt and two of
, the important points on jt—Tour-
e e RANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
ani and Valencinnes—are almost
within the grasp of the British,
London: Thirty-six tanks, one
battalion, save at least a thous
and, Jcasuaties {qevery day they
are in action; ' s
London: Allied forces which
have swept the Geérmans out of
Belgian Flanders captured the big
15 inch cannon with which the
‘Germans have been bombarding
Dunkirk during the past year.
London: = Newspapers almost
without - exception view the Ger
/man reply to President Wilson
with impatience and distrust.
Lieutenant Billy Hooper, who
has been seriously ill with pneu
monia, at Cornell, is improving,
according to news received from
"iis father, Prof. W. D, Hooper.
Mrs. A, §. OR’eilly, of New Or
leans, is the guest of Mrs. James
White, :
@ e t
. -
By Anne Austin
©l2B dy NEA. SERRICL INC. b
It was a subdued and almost
frightened Crystal who invaded
Tony’s bidroom at half past
seéven. Two months without Tony,
and—yes, without Faith, for she
did love Faith.
“Oh, darling Crystal, don’t
look so heartbroken!” Tony said,
gathering her chum into her
arms. “Tony’s sorry! It’s Pat’s
idea, you know. He’s so terribly
chastened after last night, wan®
to make up to Peg and me for
what he thinks was his desperate
wickedness, So he elected Cana
da, and Winnipeg, of all places-”
“Why ‘of all places’?” Crjstal
ask(;l, choking on tears of real
oyicf. :
“Why, poor innocent Pat has
no idea that Dick Talbot's fam
{ily owns a summer lodge in the
wilds of Canada,” Tony laughed.
',"l"m sure it's somewhere near
Winnipeg. Pat hasn’t said =«
word about = desiring to remove
me from the Dick Talbot danger
zone, but I'm sure that's at least
|a minor consideration in this
| sudden scheme of his. I'd give
lup secing Dick entirely, except
when we met at partics at the
| Country Club, of course, if Pat
| came vight out and asked me,
‘but since he hasn’t—" Tony left
the sentence suspended and divea
linto her capacious closet for the
dress she was to wear that eve
'ning.
“Dick this evening?” CUrystal|
asked, as Tony emerged with a
“period costume” frock of ivory
white taffeta, exquisitely em
broidered with cornflowers.
“Right-0!” Tony replied. “Find
me the blue satin pumps that
match this dress, won't you dar
ling? . . . I can’t help seeing
him as long as he’s so determined.
And I get more kick out of
Dick than any other boy I ever
Fnew. Now please don't ask me
again, ‘Why ton’t you marry
him, if you love him?’ The ans
wer ig, ‘I don’t want to get mar
ried to anyone, just because he
gives me a thrill, and [ wouldn’t
marry anyone if he didn’t, and 1
don’t believe i marriage for
Tony Tarver anyway, and 1 don't
really love Dick, though I sup
posc I'm temporarily in love with
him.
SThankE Ol Lo, Ouch!
’l’:nchos my toes! But maybe it's
& good thing the pumps hurt a
jittle, No girl can lose her head
lif her feei hurt her.” | e
; “I'm going to miss you wun
'bearably, Tony,” C ve'al eulped,
her eyes adoring a: Tony stood
there, <
1 “P'll write often,” Tony prom-
ised. “I’ll miss you, too. Poor
Crys! It’s a shmae you have to
stay in the hot city and slave for
Mr. Lincoln Pruitt! Say! [l've
got a luscious idea! I'll make Pat
invite you to come along as our
guest. He’ll be glad to have
you.”
“Thanks, awfully, Tony, but I
couldn’t possibly go. I'd have to
give up my job and hunt another
one when [ came back, and M.
Pruitt pays me a decent salary.
T'll have to make up my mind to
live the life of a working girl,
honey,” Crystal answered, with
surprising wisdom.
‘Tony answered onlv by kissing
Crystal, but there were tears in
both blue and hazel eyes. Tony
was ready to join Dick Talbot,
who according to Annabel wus
“mulligrubbin’ ’round downstairs
‘eause yo’ late,” when she thought
of something else: “Mrs. Pruitt,
George and Selma will spend the
summer at their place in Wis
consin, but Harry Blaine will be
in town. He told me so today,
and promised me you wouldn’l
miss the rest of the erowd too
much. Bye, darling!”
NEXT: Crystal writes: a letter
to Teny. .y’
Soule Hall Work
.
Nears Completion
Dormitory Improvements
Are Being Made.
By Elisabeth McWhirter
(Student in Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism.) -
Remodeling work at Soule Hall,
on the campus of the State Col
lege of Agriculture, which was
bvggun during the summer prob
ably will be completed by Thanks
giving, according to those in
rharge.
The first floor has been com
pletely done over. What was for
merly the gymnasium and swim
ming pool has been transformed
into an elevated, formal recep
tion hall.
Around ihe hall are banisters
{0 separate it from the rest of
ths first floor. At each side of
the short staircase leading to
‘he formal reception hall will be
placed floor lamps. Ferns an:
ralms are to be distributed about
the room. Paintings by the late
Miss Marv Franklin will be hung
on the walls. Hardwood floovs
have been put in; There are -a
sow dormitory rooms on the first
floor: «
Sceend Floor Plan
The s-cond floor is practically
finished. Tt is composed mostly
of dormitory space. What was
formeriy the reception hall has
bees made into bed rooms. The
offices have been moved to the
first floor. The rooms have
been rewaxed and painted. Space
for a reading room for newspa
pers and - current periodicals s
being reserved. Speaking tubes
connecting the entire building
will be installed in the halls of
the respective floors.
Qeveral rooms on the third
floor have been renovated. A
new stairway from this floor to
the laundry which is in the baso
ment has been built in the south
wing.
Steam Heat Installed
Soule Hall annex ad the home
‘managemvnt cottage which are
across the street from Soule Hall
have been furnished avith steam
heat., hot and cold water and
hardwood floors. The home man
agement cottage is consdiered «
model of modern convenience.
I
KILLED BY INSECT
NORWALK. O-—An insect bite
cansed the death of a woman
' here recently, The sting on one
| of her arms, caused an infection
which poisoned her whole system.
Law School Is Run As
Hobby For Students
Who Work In Day
OKMULGEE, Okla.—(AP)—A
law school which holds classes it
night, so clerks, stenographers
and others who must earn 2
livelihood during the day may
satisfy an ambition to become
lawyers, is run as a hobby by W.
L. Merwine, Okmulgee attorney.
Merwine, too, must work in the
day., as he is dependent on his
professional practice. The law
school, he says, is his contribu—'
tion to his city. 1
Merwine is dean of the school
and the students are its officers.
Several members of the Okmulzee
bar help the enterprise by teach
ing subjects with which they ar:
most familiar. The classes meet
in the basement of the city lib
rary.
Twenty-six graduates have
taken the state bar examination
and only ose of them has failed.
Miss Jewell Russell of Tulsa, who
last spring received the highest
grades in the Oklahoma bar tests,
began the study of law under
Dean Merwine. g 8
The Okmulgee school does not
seek students. Persons in other
states, and in other Oklahoma
cities, have asked whether they
may enroll, but the dean has ad
vised them to go elsewhere !if
possible, explaining the institu
tion is intended for Okmulgee
men and women who must work.
The school had its beginnimrl
several vears ago, when thr-e
young men, employed in an ab‘
stractor’s office, asked Merwine
whether he would devote a small
amount of his time to instructinez
them in law. \
The school was incorporated in
1626 and the students divided in
to junior and senior classes.
SQipes.then a; score or . more of
ambitious young men and women
have attendcd the night meet
ings.
The students enroll because
they have a real desire to learn,”
Merwine says. “A person in the
class who does mot apply himself
soon finds hig surroundings un
comfortable, and somewhat in
shame, drops out. For those s»
willing to work, however, there
is the utmost cooperation.”
To meet expenses, the school
charges tuition of SSO a year, but
this is assessed at the conven
ieflce of the students. some pay
ing in monthly installments and
others waiting until gradufition.
Dean Merwine was born in
Ohio in 1861. He worked his way
through Ohio Northern Univer
sity at Ada and later practic - 1
law at Columbus in partnershin
with Charles W. Allison, a first
cousin of President McKinley.
Yankee Ingenuity
Wins College Award
WORCESTER, Mass. —(P\— A
demonstration that “Yankee inge
nuity” still exists among New
England youth has won for 19-
year-old Louis ‘Darwin Greene
a unique scholarship award from
the Worcester Polytechnic Insti
tute. ,
This is the first bestowal of a
scholarship endowed earlier this
year by Henry J. Fuller, financial
expert of New York and a gradu
ate of the institute in the class of
1895. Fuller is providing for the
award said that its purpose was to
encourage the ingenuity that had
contributed so largely to the ad
vancement of New England.
Young Greene, who lives iR
West Springfield, Mass., has many
ingenious devices 10 his credit,
But the specific achievement that
he submitted in seeking the
scholarship was the construction
of a bridge at a Boy Scoul camp
mear Worcester. IScoify master
pave assurance that the design
and construction were entirely the
work of the applicant.
Captain Ralph Earle, pres’dent
of the institute, and the engneer
ing teachers who inspected the
bridze were impressed by the skill
ekhibited and by the fact that in
the simple but substant‘al struc
ture were incorporated many en
~imeering principles of bridge de
sign.
Other important considerations
were that the boy had overcome
an obstacle by homely means,
us'ng the best materials at his
command and using them to the
hest advantage, that he had oc
complished his objective by the
nse of only such tools as are
standard equipment of Boy Scones
and that he had directed unskilied
workers to accomplish the task
in a remarkably short time.
The bridge, built of timber and
logs cut on the site, was of su
sturdy character that an automo
bile could he driven over it
WASHINGTON —(AP)— Cap
tain Ernst A. Lehmann, first of
ficer of the Graf Zeppelin on its
trans-Atlantic flight, said Satur
day that if was impossible defi
nitely to name the cities over
which the giant airship would
travel on its inland t{rip, slated
to 'begin early next Wednesday
morning from Lakehurst.
“It is an axiom of the air,” he
explained, “that our course is al
ways decided by weather condi
tions. The take off itself will de
nend on weather conditions at
Imkehurst for it would be out of
the question to take the dirigible
from the hangar if a cross wind
is blowing. Such a wind might
break it in two,”
Chesterfields Make |
. South Pole Journey
With Commander Byril
How many cigarettes a day does
a man need when the thermometer
reads six y below zero?
Evidently Commander R'chard
E. Brrd figured it out, for Lig
gett & Myers Tobacco Company
received an order for 780,000 Ches
terfield cigarettes, which are now
on their way to the Sounth Pole
in the ships of the Byrd Antarctic
Expedition. The bas’s for this or
der was probably arrived at duyr
ing the long wait for good weather
in the Spitzbergen camp preced
ing Byrd’s flight over the North
Pole; they just “ate up cigarettes”
in those days, according to the
member of the party,
The question of which cigar
ette to choose was likewise an
swered from experience. Expedi
tion headquarters quietly question
ed members, and when a majority
of Byrd's picked men expressed a
preference for Chesterfield, a two
vear supply of that brand was
ordered, in addition to generous
stocks of such other Liggett and
Myers products as Fatima and
Piedmont cigaretées, Granger
Rough Cut and Velvet pipe tobac
cos, and -the old reliable Star
tobacco for “eating” purposes.
BEWARE THE COUGH F'
COLDS THAT HANG
Coughs from colds may lead to se
rious trouble. You can stop them
now with Creomulsion, an emulsified
creosote that is pleasant to take.
Creomulsion is a medical discuvery
with two-fold action; it soothes and
heals the inflamed membranes and in
hibits germ growth.
Of all. known drugs creosote is rec
ognized by high medical authorities
as one of the greatest healing agencies
for coughs from colds and bronchial
irritations, Creomulsion contains, in
addition to creosote, other healing
FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT ‘
e eTB R ‘—-/ oo
;. - : ¥ X - e 3
S v \
; A x w . ]
natural foe of constip
If ordinary drinking water passed through' §
the intestines, you would never need worry
about constipation. But it doesn’t —it goes o |
through the kidneys. That is where Pluto
Water differs. The mineral content of Pluto ;
Water causes it to pass through the in_t{fi- :
tinal tract. In a natural, harmless*ay it 3
washes and flushes. Prompt reli¢i follows Fi
—in 30 minutes to two how¥s. Buy Pluto
today. Physicians prescrib@it—all druggists 7
sell it. Dilute in hot wgter-—directions on §
every bottle. Bottledat¥rench Lick Springs, b
Indiana, America’s .Spa of World Renown, v
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The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antic
pain. But it just~as important to know that re is
genwine Bay:r Aspirin, The name Bayer is on &ry ta
on the box. If it says Bayer, it’s genuine; and if it does,
not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin, So are
and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neurit
rheumatism . promptly -relieved. Get Bayer—at any drug:
with proven directions.
Ph e o ‘b B a 0
ysicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin;
-
it does NOT affect the heart
Aspirin 1s the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Moneaceticacidester of Sal
4
s i Raa RS
MONDAY, OCTOR?
7 §
5
‘«E ~
)Y
e
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elements which soothe ar
inflamed membranes ans
ritation, while the creos
the stomach, is absorb
blood, attacks the seat ¢
and checks the growth of
Creomulsion 18 guarante
tory in the treatment of
colds, bronchitis and min
bronchial irritations, an
for building up the syst
or flu, Money refund
lieved after taking dcco:
tions. Ask your drugg
Gl [P s ——— ]