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ALL WEEBK . OCT. 29~ NOV. 3V [rormms
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YASPARAGUS TIPS \, \oua co 29%s
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Pineapple " .0 /9%
PINEAPPLE | DMI aag
. :;ZM_.~$M 'fl‘;
Spinach ¢, 15¢
LASTOR RICE 1.0 3 'ng 30
2T 2 W hitehous Tall .
”l l k Evapt;rc(l)t‘:j? 3 Caans , zig
. PANCAKE FLOUR " 2"2g¢
[Corn Flakes 7.5/ 27" 15¢
. POST TOASTIES | 2 " Is¢
?eaches va{Bfi;‘i’:d‘;“\.‘h&d 3(;;:—:;5 zsg
. HEINZ KETCHUP ,'‘Ouc %a23¢
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| 0 to 70 so the Lbs.
rr“nes ()[pdun:lt z for 15¢
ENIPSO wpunl g Pgy
- Brooms ... g 28
L MATCHES "3/ Dode 7? 3/ wxb you
L 8 O'Clock—Pine Santes
Coffee -.. . 35¢
NO. 1 WHITE POTATOES, ISc
Eaandstor .. ... . ... ...
MARKET DAY RAISINS, 17 c
2 Pound Package .. .. ... .
COLUMBIA RINDLESS 33 C
BACON, pound ... .. .. ...
(&&“fiffmlmwcs.Pmnncx‘& s
(Continued trom Fage One)
that “moral conscience” is
needed to abolish the liquor
traffic.
The situation to which blind
fealty to a prohibitory statute
has brought the American people
is described in graphic detail by
Dr. Tippett, and he puts his
finger on the real reason why the
18th Amendment cannot be eu
forced, when he says that even
“church officials, grand and tra
verse jurors and church mem
bers” are drinking whiskey. ‘
The effectiveness of a law de
pends, in the end, on the exte-t
of support given its enforcement
by the good people of the com
munity. When the community’s
best people, men of culture and
good-breeding, are opposed to the
existing form of a law, it can
not be enforced. If the Prohibi
tion Law is ever to be enforced,
the conscience of the church peo
ple as well as other good people
who are mnot church members,
must be OPPOSED 10 THE USE
OF ALCOHOL.
In Sunday's Atlanta Jour- I
nal, Dr. C. B. Wilmer, that
great and good Episcopal
Minister, quoted from the |
Christian Century, one of the
leading Protestant religious
publications in the country,
that the Protestant Church
has made Prohibition part of
“the orthodoxy of the
Church.”
Back in the Middle Ages, man
were broken on the wheel and
burned at the stake, because they
denied a particular dogma of the
Church. Whether the heretic
lived a good life was of no con
sequence, as far as the Church
was concerned. His crime was
heresy against a dogma of the
Church, and for that he was pun
ished.
The Christian Century asserts
that the 18th Amendment has be
come part of the dogma of the
Protestant Church (the Christian
Century is in favor of the 18th
Amendment and the Church’s
support of it in politics) .
Governor Alfred E. Smith’s
frank analysis of the Prohibition
guestion is heresy, Dbecause he
opposes a law which men like
William Howard Taft, Nicholas
Murray Butler, President Hadley
of Yale University, Newton D.
Baker, and countless others of
lika high standing, assert CAN-
Not be enforced; a declaration
which Dr. Tippett supports to the
extent of admitting that it IS
not being enforced.
The gzreat danger to the effec
tiveness of the Church as an in
strument of moral veform, when
it enters into a trade with the
State, is to rily on external law
instead of internal law-—the po
liceman instead of conscience.
Dr. Tippett sees clearly
that the Church has lost its .
effectiveness in the moral
life of individuals because
the Church has transferred to
the State a duty which the
Church, from its beginnings,
hes set up for itself to per
form.
Wh:n the. Church puts it:
faith in a Law of the State if
sjpends all its energies in trying
to keep that Law on the statute
books: time that should be spent
in education of individual con.
seitnce against the kind of con
duet the Law would prohibit. T¢
criticize that Law —the 18t
Amendment — becomes heres}y
against the Church.
“'Would it not be better, a grea
mary people are asking, as Dr
Fippett implies——for the Churel
to spend less time trying to jus
tify the 18th Amendment ane
more time educating peopl
against the use of alcoholics?
&NNE&HEBALDE ATHENS, GEORGIA.
iNovelist ‘
Dies From Poison
eG irom page one)
y and are uncomprom
'psed to the forces o
ling and shaping the
~ this community. We
evil in all its forms,
‘make it a God-serv
d fearing community
ghteousness shall pre-
gz shall we stand- this
on of the prohibition
long shall we remain
2 conditions are grave
. '}‘here is open vio
very hand. Whiskey is
to boys of High School
e-is drinking at practi
social » Yunctions. Are
is of the city of Ath
{ the county of Clarke
! these conditions? Are
and aggressive in the
it of law? If not, why
hall hold them respon
ve be interested in Na
aibition? We were in
« putting this law intc
ation., We are interest.
mforcement, Should we
srested in keeping is as
of the land?
.ggested that the reasor
ack of enforcement ir
iblic sentiment. lls thi
[_. there no conviction in
aunity for law enforce
' not, who is so blame?
e churches are largely
e. 'The churches have
at. Everybody is silent,
Perhaps one reason for
e has been that too
arch members drink and
“blind tigers”. Even
fficials and leaders in
are guilty. No wonder
ches have lost moral
y when church people are
he biggest drinkers. an
in town, and when they
stand for righteousness
1 living. Yes, I believe
sht to come a “gplit”’ in
hes—a complete separa-
tion—or a wholesale repentence
yn the part of church people.
Jurors Drink
*“Another reason is suggested in
a letter I received this week from
a prominent citizen of this coun
ty, that a large percent of the
men on the Grand Jury and Tra
verse Jury are drinking men and
dre Indt in synjpathy with the
prohibition law. Is this fact re
sponsible for the present condi
tion of things? How serious is this
charge. ? ; A
“When the churches assume its
responsibility of moral leadership
and stand against evil and fights
for righteousness, we need have
no fear as to the ultimate triumph
of right, We are to blame for
present conditiogm. Our indiffer
ence is responsible. We have left
this issue in the hands of unre
sponsible persons and agencies,
We stand as the scorn enemy of
the liquor business. We should
never give up four fight. The
churches can save America and I
belleve they will. But when, oh!
when will the churches awake.
Awake, O Zion, and put on thy
strength. ~
“What is wrong? We have lost
the consciousness of sin. We have
Jost conviction, moral stamina and
courage. The churches do no’
possess their own souls. They
have allowed outside influences te
dictate its positions on great mor
al issues, and hence the church
has been silent, The church has
been concerned too muc about
heaven and too little about earth
Indifference is wide spread. Ow
religious life is too superficial.
The church has lost its militan’
gpirit. It no longer leads the
forces of righteousness against the
forces of evil.” It yields too much
to public sentiment and does not
create public sentiment. We need
Christ. : |
“{What is the remedy? We need
to awaken the sleeping consci
ence; to restore a decaying mor
ality; to revive spiritual religion®
to revive convictions; to preact
a gospel of righteousness; to re
sist sin unto blood (Heb. 12:4); tc
rally the forces of right against
evil; to pray for leadership and
divine power; to be more con
cerned about the will of God thar
the ,plaudits of man; a ministry
who leads rather than be led
These are perilous days. To our
tasks, O Church, and God wil?
give us victory”.
Visit To America Ended,
Zeppelin Is On Way Back
_ (Contingea trom Pars One)
nose into the breaking dawn and
towards its distant hangar at
Friederichshafen, Germany, at
6:95 o’clock Monday morning.
After a speedy trip up the coast
*vom the naval air station at Lake.
hurst, New Jersey. The dirigible
left land behind as it flew swiftly
out over Nantucket Sound, near!y
midway between Great Point Light
on this island, and Monomy Light
on the long spur which juts out
from the south eastern t'p of Cap 2
Cod.
I* was Jjust four hows and
e¢'even minutes irom the time it
cleared the mnavat air station.
Acoard were thireo score men, {g.
cinting three otfiicers of ta2 Unit.
e States Navy, cdre woman und a
cargo of freight.
After having hugged the coast.
line since it quit the air stationm,
the Zeppelin struck boldly out to
sea, heading southeast. A group
of early hunters, who, with the
lighthouse keepers, glimpsed the
big ship, estimated it was making
close td 80 miles an hour and that
it wad flying -at{an altitude "of
| abq‘uthl,sgq i%eet. L { ¢
©lt held 'ifs . comuse dyer Lo
’ Island Sound and‘(:inmkéd' 3%
’the Rhode Island short. A few
minytes later if was steering .
course over Vineyard Sound and
for a #r; time it appeared f@s if
it might“head northeast for Prov
incetown, but it soon straightened
out. Picking up its bearings and
held east until it passed out to
sea,
FIND STOWAWAY
BERLIN, Germany. —(&)— Th
representative of the Loka! Anve’
ger, aboard the Graf Zeppelin Mon
day wirelessed his newspaper tha
a 17 year old American youth wa
discovered on the air liner as
stowaway at 6 a. m. Monday.
SENDS THANKS
WASHINGTON.—(&P)—After the
Graf Zeppelin left Lakehurst o
her return flight to Germany, Di
Hugo Eckener, commander of
airship radioed the following mes
sage at 3:28 a, m. to Secretar
Wilbur:
“On leaving Lakehurst we fee
generous assistance and hospital
ity which your depariment ha
extended to us during our Vis
in this country”. .
A SURPRISE
' BERLIN, Germany. —(P)— Th¢
start of the Graf Zeppelin on he:
return flight from the Unitec
States Monday, came as a surprise
to the German public who bad been
led to assume that Dr. Eckener
the commander, had decided tc
postpone the voyage until Tues
day,
. RADIOES COOLIDGE
WASHINGTON.—(P)—A radio
gram expressing gratitude for the
hohpitality shown them during
their stay in the United States,
was received by President Coolidge
Monday from the crew of the Ger
man dirigible Graf Zeppelin.
./ The rad‘ogram, sent as the Zep
pelin left Lakehurst, was signed
by Dr. Hugo Eckener, the com
mander. It read: :
“On leaving your great coun
try, we beg permission to express
our feelings of sincere gratitude
for the gracious reception which
has been accorded us by yourself
and by the American people”.
Newton D. Baker, First
Speaker At The Welfare
Conference In Universiyt
Opposes 18th Amendment
(Continuea from page one)
the penitentiary and another was
tricd for grave public offenses.
In the latter of thuse States & Re
publican Governcr was saved from
criminal penirlties b 5 a-plen ol
statute of limitations and' required
by civil proceedings to rolurn vast
sums to the public Treasury which
he had illegally abstracted there
from; while the United States
Senator-designate and elect was
rejected by the Senate for gross
election frauds. "Mr. Hoover is
the candidate of the party which
elected President Hard'ng, dur
ing whose Administration the Sec
retary of the Interior fraudulently
and corruptly despoiled the pub
lic domain; the Attorney General
was tried for complicity in fraud
ulent transactions; the Alien
Property Custodian was similarly
‘iried, »and other meinbers of the
Administration high In place were
openly disgraced for fraud and
dinhonesty.
Mr. Hoover was himself a
member of that Administra
tion and sat by without pro
test of any public sort while
these very dreadful things
were going on, and the party,
whose nominee he now is. ac
cepted through Mr, Wiil Hays
from Mr. Sinclair great sums
of' money, which were the
fruits of his fzaud upon the
" people. of the United States,
to pay the debts of the Nation
al Committee, with which com
mittee Mr. Hoover is now, of
course, actively associated and
working. :
' Praises Smith,
1 say these things not harshly
put in the hope that I can bring
to a candid mind like yours some
sense of the amazement I feel that
any partisan of Mr. Hoover’s
should think it possible to refer to
Tammany as a limitation upon
Gov. Smith’s eligibility, particular
ly when it is further recalled that
during Gov. Smith’s four terms
as the Chief Executive of the Em
pire State no breath of accusa
tion has ever been raised against
his personal integrity or the stern
uprightness which he has required
his Administration to govern and
care for the financial ‘nterests of
the State of New York.
I hope from what I have said
you will exonerate me from blind
adhesion to merely partisan politi.
;cal affiliations. Gov. Smith has
lemonsirated a great humanitarian
conscience, People in New York
like Root and Hughes, represent.
‘ng the Republican Party; social
rworkers,fiwho gspend their lives
with the poor; bankers, merchants
and philanthropists all concur ir
testifying alike to his humanity
and his vision. Perhaps no man
within our lifetime has by com.
mon consent better understood the
processes of government or more
genninely sympathized with the
lot of the common man in our Re-.
public. In the light of these truths
I cannot feel that I need any ex.
cuse for believing that he would
make a great President.
NEWTON D. BAKER.
A Strengthening,
Invigorating Tonic
for Women & Children
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Janet Gaynor i "Street Angel; T uTC
“STREET ANGEL,” Marevlous . Musical Sound Picture Palace
Now Plyaing
KIWANIS BEATS ROTARY OPPONENTS
FOR RETENTION OF NELSON’S CUP
The Kiwanis Club retains the
Nelson-Holman golf cup for an
other year as the result-of match
es plaved over the week-end. Two
remaining matches are scheduled
but the result would have no ef
fect on the cup ag the Kiwanis
c¢lub has 34 points out of a. pos
sible 66 and should Rotary win
Fulton Co. Grand Jury
"Vill Be Asked To Indict
Harsh And Gallogly
(Continued from Page One)
but died of wounds himself. In
both instances a car was await
ing outside for the gunman.
Harsh claimed, in his detailed
story to police, that Gallogly
drove the car and he did thz
shooting . ;
“I am. deeply sorry for all th>f
has come to pass. Heaven knows
#t would not happen had it to be
done ‘over again,” he told news
papermen in his slightly affected
way Sunday.
Bad liquor, fast living—Harsh
blamed for his decision to find a
thrill in holding up stores. H:
needed no money. Friends said
he squandered plenty at school,
where he took only easy courses,
intending, it was 3aid, to be “a
journalist.” ,
One college friend said the two
“are the country club type.” ‘
A blood-stain:d pair of trous
ers led to Harsh's arrest. Dete:-
tive Lowe was informed that a
doctor had treated a youth for a
bullet wound in the thigh, after
Smith, the drug cl:rk, had been
slain, But he could not identify
the wounded man. Lowe then
started a search of dry cleaning
establishments, finally tracing «
pair of trousers which had be:n
cleaned of blood to the apartment
where Harsh stayed. Ifowe said
ALESMAN SAM
BUSINESS HaS BEEN 50 ™ WaIL,NOUR ) {CUT TH SpRCASM — ALL We |\ MEsée
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LTS R, \- ) 1977, BY NEA SERVCE. b"EC U S PAT.OFF B VRIS {
18 points in the two matches it
would still be two points short of
a tie.
Two ‘tournaments were neces
sary this year to determine the
winner, the golfers of the two
clubs tieing in the first matches
played earlier in the year.
,the rest was easy.
' Harsh had limped about the
University campus a week after
Smith was killed, friends said.
“I had a bottle on my hip and
fell on it. Got a pretty bad cut,
one fraternity brother of the ar
risted youth quoted” Harsh s
saying in explanation.
B — o
Dissipation Of Assets
Charged To Receivers
Of Clinton S. Carnes
. (Continued trom u:ce one,)
ceivers are failing to properly con
gerve the assets is seen in the man
ner which they sold an equity
amounting to more than SIOO,OOO in
a priee of valuable Spring street
property for a paltry $15,000," Mr.
Howard said. “At this rale the en
tire assets, which Carnes values at
more than $400,000, will be practi
cally nothing.
| Pastors, Kinsmen, judges, busi
nessmen and others shared in the
liberal loans made by Carnes.
| Among the list were Rev. T, W.
i ‘T'ippett, of Athens, $3,500; A. W.
Garrett, of Dablin, $5,000; the Rev.
T. 8. Kamp'on, Texas, $500; Dr.
William J. Harper, Candler Luilding,
Atlanta, $800; Lincoln S. Morrison,
Atlanta, $3,80.17; L. L, Woodward,
representing one-third interest in
Truluck farm in Dooly county, Geor
gia, $4,000.
Receivers advise the board to se
cure a note for §4,000 for the latter
loan from L. L. Woodward and Miss
Emily Woodward, who /hold the
legal title to Truluck farm.
Weuldn’t You, Too?
MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1928
-
MARKET NEWS
JOHY F. CLARK & Ce.
H. G. COOPER, Manager.
268 Shackelford Buildimg
Phone 1748
CHICAGO BUTTER MARKET
CHICAGO. — (AP) — Butter
higher; 8,163 tubs received;
creamery . extras, 47; standards,
45%; extra firsts, 48 and 47;
firsts, 43. and. 45; seconds, 41
and 42% ~
' NEW YORK COTTON
. Open High Low Close P. (.
Dec.. 19.50 19.75 19.47 19.62 19.34
Jan.. 19.52 19.72 19.45 19.62 19.32
Mech..19.47 19.69 19.43 19.62 19.25
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
Open High Low Close P; C,
Dec.. 18.95 19.20 18.93 19.15 18.73
Jan.. 19.01 19.20 18.95 19.13 1880
Mch..1_8.99 16.19 18.93 19.12 18.7 s
CHICAGO GRAIN
5 Open Close P, C,
WHEAT—
Dee. .. v .. 117% 117%: 114%
March .. .. 122% 121% . 11985
May .. « .. 126% 124% *1221c
CORN— 5
Dep, [ sov 4 Bk Bt~ B 8
Mareh ~ .. Bd¥ 84 837%
May Lol 8 86% Bok BBS
OATS—
Dec. .os o 0 4398 448 G .
Mareh:, . .. 4% 44
May (> 0 dRMg a 8 4415
S2O TO KILL CAT g
PHILADELPHIA.—It cast John
Murphy S2O to kill a cat. Agent
Price of the Anticruelty. Society
told Magistrate Cozens that Mur
phy threw the cat against the wall
of a church with the remark “it
won’t annoy me again.”
e e R P
A RAZOR STORY
NAZARETH, Pa, — Consciénce
comb'ned with a serious illness
caused a man to return a razor
to a local hardware store receni.
ly, which he had stolen from there
15 years-ago. As a reward for h's
changed attitude the owner.of the
store gave the penitent a new ra
zor to take the place of the one
returned. ;
————————————————————— ——————————————— et
NOTICE
1928
STATE and COUNTY
TAXES
NOW DUE
A. M. BURCH, T. C.
CLASSIFIED..
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BANNER-HERALD
Phone 75
By Small