The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, December 20, 1928, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1928, Buy Your Bargains Across the CLASSIFIED COUNTER WANT AD RATES 2 Cents a Word Minimum charge of 40 cents. SI.OO for three insertions. Seven times for the price of five in sertions. All discontinuances MUST be made in person at the Banner- Herald Office or 'by letter. Telephone discontinuances are not valid. 75 WantAd 75 PHONE BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS GET RESULTS. ARSI . TR R FOR SALE FOR SALE—Six-room house, sleeping porch, double garage, steam heat, near First Baptist church. Possesgion January 1. Price right. HAVE $1,000.00 to lend on im proved real estate. SOME very desirable lots at half price and reasonable perms. D. G. ANDERSON & CO. d23c FOR SALE — “FRUIT CAKE,” Just the kind that you need to make Christmas complete, one to five pound sizes, order from your grocers. Benson’s Ine. d27c FOR SALE OR RENT-—One new six-rcom bungalow on South Lumpkin street. Furnace heat; Phene 1446 or 1574. d2lc SELECT XMAS CARDS with the right kind of sent ments. Wh te head’s Gift Shop. d2oc¢ FOR SALE—Good as new Singer Electric sewing machine. Phone 702 or 791. d23c FOR SALE—Beaut'ful white male Eskimo Spitz puppy; healthy; thoroughbred; two months old. Price SIO.OO. Lovely Chr'stmas present. Phone 449-J. d223c FOR SALE—Living Room Suites, Breakfast Set, Wardrobe, Dress ing Table, Baby Bed, Instantan eous Heater, Gas Range, Re frigerator, Rugs, Kitchen Cab’- net. Phone 1573. d2op F@R SALE — Old-time country sausage at curb market or phone 1608-J. Proctor Campbell, d2op FOR SALE—Sweet Milk, Cream, Butter and Butter Milk at Mod ern Dairy, 475 E, Clayton St. Phone 547. It's Pasteurized. d23p PETS FOR GIFTS FOR SALE—Two Persian kittens, 4.months old. Lovely for Christ mas gifts, sls each. Phone 1808. d24p el i e e set SEND XMAS CARDS that you are ! not ashamed of. Whitehead’s Gitt Shop. a2oc SELECT XMAS CARDS with the ¢ right kind of sent'ments. Wh'te- , head’s Gitt Shop. aoc | FOR SALE—Pecans, 20c pound; 6 pounds SI.OO. Phone 1488, 125 Henderson Avenue. d2oc FOR SALE—ldeal gifts. Beautiful affectionate orange Persian cats and kittens. Mrs. James Baynes, Greensboro, Ga. dl9c A SUGGESTION—Give a hat for Xmas. Big reduction on all hats. One lot prced as low as SI.OO. Mrs. Arthur Burch. d2o¢ * | Railroad Schedules | i I # SEABOARD Arrival and Departure of Trains Athens, Ga. " To and From South and West ARRIVE DEPART A Atlanta. 10:256 pm Birmingham 8:53 am| 1:27 am Atlanta 5:29 am 10:30 am Atlanta 5:30 pm Atlanta -2:15 pm BRham-Mem. 2:45 pm To and From North and East ARRIVE DEPART New York-Wash. 5:99 am Rich.-Norfolk 10:25 pm New_ York-Wash. 8:53 am Richmond 1:27 am New York-Wash. 2:45 pm Rich.-Norfolk 2:15 pm 'GAINESVILLE MIDLAND ¢ SCHEDULES Leave Athens No. 2 for Ga'nesville, 7:45 A M No. 12 for Gainesville, 10:45 A. M. Arrive Athens No. 11 from Gainesville, 10:00 A M No. 1 from Gainesville, 4:66 P. M., CENTRAL OF GEORGIA ; TRAINS Depart for Macon 8:00 a. m,, __and 445 p. m. Av¥tive from Macon 11:45 a. m,, and 9:10 p. m. GEO. BEELAND, C. A, Phone 640 W. 0. BOLTON, Agt., Phone 1661 GEORGIA RAILROAD ‘ SCHEDULES | ARRIVE DEPART 7:30 am 8:30 am I%W 1:50 pm 3:30 pm—x x—4:45 pm 3118 pm-—x x—9:oo pm x—Daily except Sunday. SOUTHERN RAILWAY Lula-North-South DFPART ARRIVE 7:256 am 10:45 am 4:.40 pi B:4b pm Con © Miller, Com'l Agent, o) Selephone 81. : WANTED s s L R esl WANTED—Position as stenogra pher starting January 1: can furnish weferences; phone 279 or 1844-W, after six o’clock. d2lp - LOST AND FOUND LOST — Black Warus Leather Hand Bag on Augusta road about six miles from Athens. Finder please return to F~ Georgian. Reward. J. 0. Mil ler. d2lp LOST——;lgin yellow gold wrist watch, with “Frances” engraved on back, Finder return to R. W. Mewbourne at Pinson-Brun son Motor Co. Reward. d2op SEND XMAS CARDS that you are not . ashamed of. Whitehead’s Gift Shop. d2oc BIG DANCE—Colbert Gym, Col bert, Ga., Friday night, Dec. 21st. Good musie, good order. Gen tlemen 50c, ladies free. d2lp FOR RENT FOR RENT—My home, 297 Hull Street; with three beds, shades, heaters, and kitchen equipment furnished, to good party who will take students, $60.00 per month; without beds; $50.00. Capt. N'cholas has key. Wi'l be in Athens Saturday. Col. James BE. Ware. d2lc FOR RENT—One n’'cely furnished room, with board, for 2or 3 men or couple without children. . Phone 388-J, 272 West Hancock Avenue, d2op SEE MY CHRISTMAS CEMETERY WR¥YATHS At Sterchi Furniture Co. Friday-Saturday-Monday Before Christmas ___MISS NETTIE JONES SPECIAL Jergen’s Soap Sampler Box of Nine Assorted Cakes, $1.20 Value FOR 89¢ CITIZENS PHARMACY THE VETERINARY OIVISION | Georgia State College of | | Agriculture ! Will Respond to Calls for i VETERINARY SERVICE | Moderate charges will be made. Phone 767-J. Athens, ?a'q GOOD USED CARS 30 Days Guarantee. C. GRADY HENSON Oakland - } ontiac Dealer Phone 741. GIFT BOXES, Cigars, Cigar ettes, Newspaper and Magazine subscriptions. Leave order now to be delivered later. GEORGIAN HUTEL NEWS AND CIGAR STAND FIREWORKS FOR SALE BY GEORGE W. HALE 8! Miles on Winterville Road d24p /.1 3 "z'_ %‘f JV :;?\ ‘,‘ -«' * ’“z; I! p' fif, -"’ @ s :ir;.;,/;i“”.: \\\ a 7 \%‘ BICYCLES—S24.9O. Union Hardware Skates, $1.95. Bicycles, Velocipedes and Skates Repa‘red. ATHENS CYCLE CO. THE STYLE SIIOP MISS SUSIE WELLS 186 East Clayton Street For Xmas Gifts Ladies’ Hats, Baby Bonnets, Coat and Dress Flowers, Hose. Brassieres, Garter Belts, Hand kerchiefs and Scarfs, We make Old Hats New in onr hat hospital for 50c, 75¢ and sl. —New Brick Bungalow, five rooms, all modern conveniences: in best section of city. Price reasonable, —Several well-located residence lots at attractive prices. Terms can be arranged. 2 H. 0. EPTING & CO. 102 Shackelford Building —P’hone 1686— e London Women Find . . Beauty Magic in Long * Ago Used Preparation By DOROTHY RUSSELL l ~ (Assoriated Press Staff Writer) LONDON.—(P)—Beauty secrets 300 years old are now being sought by actresses and society folk from a dog-eared and faded “Magic” book of the 17th Century. Between its worh covers are revealed the “Conceited Secrets’™ of famous beaut‘es of past ages, wh'ch, judging by the mark their users made in history, have a po tency little short of magic. | “Three centuries ago, women ' made their own 'beauty prepara ticns wh'ch were handed down as a precious legacy from mother to daughter,” said M’'ss Char lotte Bond, owner of the boek, “They were concocted in the still room with the coffee and were caref{u'ly guarded secrets.” ’ Among the quaint!y phrased prescriptions in the book is a | “sack” of rose leaves, made moist and bound on the face w'th mus lin. It was left on over night, to beautify the skin during sleep. For those with th'n or falling hair, a recipe ‘s given “which maketh the hair to breed exceedingly.” - Aids to beauty had to be potent in those days for, said M'ss Bond, A SUGGESTION—G've a, hat for Xmas. Big reduction on all hats. One lot prced as ‘ow as SI.OO. Mrs. Arthur Burch. da2oce Y R ——— FIREWORKS BABO DUNAWAY and GEORGE STEVENS M tche'| Bridge and Jefferson Road—Cheapest in Town. ! dißp With an “OK” That Sounts 21928 Chevrolet Coupes ' 3—1927 Chevrolet Coaches. 1—1928 Chevrolet Landau Se dan. 1—1927 Chevrolet Cabriolet 1—1.26 Chevrolet 1-ton Truck 1-1926 Ford Touring 1--1926 Ford Touring 1—1926 Ford Roadster 1—1926 Ford Sedan 1—1926 Chevrolet Touring 1—1924 Chevrolet Sedan 21924 Ford Coupes 21923 Buick Tourines 11925 Chrysler Roadster 1—1926 Ford Coupe. 1—1926 Ford Roadster 11926 Chevrolet Light Deliv ery Truck. PHONE 461 FOR DEMONSTRATION And one of the Following Men will be glad to call: Sam W. Pinson, Gen. Mgr. W. E. Hopkins, Sales Mgr, and Assistant Mgr. L. 1. Moss, J. C. Weeks, A. W. Callaway, J. R. Hopkins, T. I. Webb, J. A. Copeland, J. B, Bk : PINSON-BRUNSON MOTOR CO. CHEVROLET DEALERS 168-70 Washington Street : ® , " A CHRISTMAS GIFT THAT LASTS A YEAR! ; GIVE A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE . GEORGIAN-AMERICAN 1 YEAR .. $9.50 & MONTHS . . $5.00 3 MONTHS . . $2.50 8%5 BT o B 2 00 o T ! FIREWORKS FOR SALE See us before you buy. Reduced prices. First ‘ent on left outside city limits on Jefferson Road. Also on Princeton Road below H. R. Waters store in forks of road. SEAGRAVES AND NELMS Be Sure to Find Us—Our Prices are Right! BIRD CAGES THE health, and even the singing of your bird, is largely dependent upon its home. Comein and see our new Hendryx cages —the best made from the standpoint of bird health and smart design. % THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA. “in 1623, women did not use much powder on their faces, but they blackened ther eyebrows and painted their faces pink. There was no lip-st'ck; that is a mod ern production,” The book is dedicated to Fran ces, Countess Dowager of Exeter, by a “true admirer of her noble v'rtues,” and is said to contain “all the virtues wh'ch oueht to be in the complete woman,” The “comp’ete woman” must have had her hands full, for in addition to the beauty recipes, her “virtues” covered a range of knowledge in cluding solut ons for every con ce'vable difficulty of domestic life, from remedies for toothache to cooking a dinner that even a husband of long standing would be glad to eat. i Toothache, we are told, w'll yie'd to a “handfulle of daisy rootes” suitably treated, but if the remedy shou'd fa'l the tooth may be painlessly extracted by the so lowing method: “Take some of the elder tree or the apples of oak trees and with either of them rub the teeth and gums and it w'l loosen them so you may take them out.” . Mrs. Fanny Conyers Ll Died Last Sunday Mys; Fanny Conyer, mother of Mrs. J. J. Bennett, ..rmerly of Athens died in Cartersville, Ga. Sunday and was buried Tuesday afterncon. Mrs. Bennett is the wife of Dr. J. J. Bennett former pastor of “he Prince Avenue Baptist church and has many friends here who will regret to learn of her moth ers death. JOHN F. CLARK & CO. H. G. COOPER, Manager 208 Shackelford Puilding Phone 1748 RR S R RST NAR RRS ST SR Y ATHENS COTTON MARKET The local cotton market closed Thursday at 187% cents. The pre vious c.ose was 187% cents. . NEW YORK COTTON Open High Low Close P. C. Deec...20.35 20.47 20.93 20.33 20.29 J0n...20.35 20.91 20.15 20.15 20,16 Mar.. .20.28 20.95 20.18 20.18 20.20 NEW ORLEANS COTTON Open High Low Close P. C. Dec... 19.59 19.60 19.45 19.46 1941 Jan... 19.65 19.70 19.48 19.48 19.51 Mar... 19.76 19.79 19.56 19.56 19,60 [ CHICAGO MARKET Open Close P. C. WHEAT— Dec. .. .. ..116%8 115% 115 Mar. .. .. ..119% ‘llß% 119% May .. .. 121% 191% 1218 CORN— Dec. .. .. .. BBk BRI SR Mar, .. .. ... 816 80% 87K May .. .. .. 90% 89% 80K OATS— Pee. .. .. ... 0% 115 &% Mar. ... . % Ti% U May .. .. .. 48% 48 48% - DOLLAR UNDISTURBED GARDNER, Mass.—(AP)—A dol lar bill found in 1910 has hung in a frame on the wall of the For esters of Amer:ca lodge room rere for 18 years. Various organ izations and individuals rented the hall but the dollar remained. e A gran’te marker to the 20 per ‘sons who died in a dance hall ex. plosion at West Plains, Mo., wil mark ther graves, " THE PERFECT GIFT! —One of these Cages ) with stand, ducoed in bright colors, and a pair of Sweet Singers. Cage and Stand $4.75 to $6.98 Pair of Birds $7.50 H. L. COFER & CO. —SEEDSMEN-— 378 Broad Street Announcements FOR TAX RECEIVER | I hereby announce myself a can- A'dnta far tha office of Tax Re ceiver for Clarke County, Ga, subject to the rules and regula tions of the special election which will be duly called to elect a suec cessor to the late J. H. Dorsey. I will appreciate the vote, sup port and influence of every voter in the county and thank you in ad vance for your consideration in my behalf, : | Respectfully, | J. Me. HOWELL. i | FOR TAX RECEIVER 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for ‘Tax Receiver for Clarke County, Georg'a, subject to the rules and regulations of the special election to be called to elect a successor to the late J. H. Dorsey. Your vote will be ap preciated. | HOPE T. SMITH. FOR TAX RECEIVER To the People of C.arke County: I hereby announce as a candi date for Tax Receiver for Clarke County, Georgia, in the special election to be held January 12th, 1929. Your support will be ap prec ated, RUTHERFORD \COILE. FOR TAX RECEIVER { I hareny announce myself a can- | didate for Tax Receiver for Clarke County, Georgia, subject to the rules and regulations of the spec- | jal election to be ca'’ed to e'ect a | guccessor to my brother, the late J. H. Dorsey. Your vote and oup- | port will be appreciated. ‘ | E. H. DORSEY, SR. | ; FOR TAX RECEIVER ‘ I hereby announce myself as a andidate for the off ce of Tax Rece ver of Clarke County, made | vacant by the death of Mr. J. H. l Dorsey, subject to the rules and regulations of the special elec tion to be held on January 12th, 1929. 1 will appreciate your sup port and vote. ' MRS. RUBY HARTMAN, | FOR TAX RECEIVER | 1 hereby announce my eandida cy for the office of Tax Receiver of Clarke county, Georgia, for the \ full term to which the late J. H. ‘Dorsey was elected, subject to the !yules and reghlations of the special election which is to be duly call ed to name his successor. I will appreciate the support of every voter and shall make an effort to see each of you person ally on my own behalf. Respectfully, ‘ S. W. USSERY. FOR TAX RECEIVER 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of Tax Rece‘ver for Clarke County, Ga, subject to the rules and regula., tions of the special e'ection which will be duly called to elect a suc cessor to the late J. H. Dorsey. 1 w'll appreciate the vote, FuD port and influence of every voter in the county and thank you in ad vance for every cons’deration given in my behalf. Respectfully, W. M. BRYANT. FOR TAX RECEIVER I hereby announce myself as a ~andiaate for the office of T Receiver of Clarke county, Geor gia, at the gpecial election to b held January 12, 1929, the fu! term made vacant by the deatl of Mr. J. H. Dorsey. I will ereatly appreciate the vote and influence of every vote: 7f this county. HAROLD T. TUCK. e e . Americans Love Paris . But Cling to Waifles By SMITH REAVIS (Associated Press Staff Writer) PARIS. —{(#)— Americans ir France, tourists, resident and so called expatriates live just aogt as they did in the United sta' a curious correspondent has dis @overed after a long intostiga tion. Granted that they have be come accustomed to the light wines of Burgundy and Bordeaux and the headier vintages of Champagne, they still eat withy relish purely American dishes: consort with other Americans on all possible occasions, read Am erican newspaper and express their opinions in 'good United States. ’ Even Ezra Pound, expatriate of the expatriates and proud of it. is said by his friends to relish it. good waffle. The American breakfast is still genreally pre ferred to the meagre coffee ani rolls of France. Few citizens of the western republic, no matter how long they have lLved ir France, have gone completely “native.” Montparnasse, American fringe of the farm-famed Latin Quarter is a good example of a little United States in France. There where modernists, super-modern. ists and super»super-modemxstfl gather to condemn the intellect ual apathy of their stay—at-homp.( countrymen, they often as not do it to the accompaniment of a haml steak cooked, not as any French man ever conceived the cuckin"l a ham ‘steak, but as it is done| gouth of the now illusory Mason and Dixon line, The most ponla*l rdqitaurant in the “Quarter” is run by an American named Wil son, and corned beef hash with poached egg and ham and eggs form the most called-for items of his daily bil of fare, | Purely French resturants havcj added American dishes, to the Lest of their aiility, to their me nus to saucfy iue home cosbiag hineoer of Montparpasse’s expat riates. The great maiority of Ameri can homes in Parjs arc furnighed wi‘h articles of purely French or igin, but in most of them there is'a touch of the other-side-of - the-water, if only in the arrange ment of a chair or a tasle. Their owners gppreciate the French taste and Frencn culture, fut merely graft them on, ag it were, to the taste and culture of thew: homeland. To the Fiiachman, the Amer ~ MODERN-HELMETS | N .Y.'*' '.n”' ,"'.. ;L R ”7.‘"_ & Y S ~, 58 . ' ”_/,."7 E s S~ = okl \ - ‘[ £ 7T R A : *§ . o E AT B 8 Lt P e e R s N A . v < . e MARINE g ROM time imniemorial man has been known by his hat. Whether it was old and shapeless and had sacrificed lits mode to his mood; or whether it was resplendent with freshness and style, it has been an unerring indicator of the man—his charac ter, his position and worth, his personality. It is no less true of the modern man and his headcovering than it was in the days of Napoleon's fa mous tri-corn or the historic fur headpiece in which Caesar crossed | the Alps. | The hat of today does with a mere graceful gesture—a twist of the brim or an extra inch to the crown—what the hats of ancient days achieved with elaborate pomp and ceremony—places accurately the standing of its wearer. In hat lore it is said that the hat worn down to the right over the eyes indicates the man who is re sponsive to compliments and con. scious of his charm. The actor who OUT OUR WAY— ————— = ‘_‘:? oo - \?_ e & oamemabet s = % ) NO‘V NO W ~— - WiLL BE IF = — - WiILD HOU GO 1O - =—— Z\ “ 5L SHOOTIN', (AT, ¢ ffi}{, = " R ""%{:‘fm 47 ‘EM. THEMS | | = e ~ FELLERS TOTiIN g \fié&\ = =T CHRISTMAS 4 GNZ N S RSTMER \ R i by R G \TREES. ARG & K\’( \l\ 41 \\l‘ i’ Mfl,fit‘/ Z g "‘f “% MR kg \\, \.N\\\\ //(.\(v’,i" il “l/\liwlfé#“wv st~ 1720 Rt fi%\ WO P i ML ey : - 3 ¥ '“" s "",‘W 7_::& \m ,%7/2: : . 4'\ : "4 j: 0 o «*,"*’l\& e =5 : A ~“’)@" o o T T e T \»c_g s Z— &?“@M : o g \ }N | 5k %flgfiw | "&’fié«w‘- il T A *;\gz,zmj,lf?; o sYAZR - %’ A w 77 N\ iy ; AT ST, TN ... ~ e ‘ C N O\ G J R ' “%w L e Y L{' AN et k.%: . Yi‘ \:/ 7 .23 3{/ % | e el OB - . B % vl AN\ i “:-_._nv,‘\. (& »‘. . =2 & /// f, i{‘: A\ s, ETRS “A : 7 ’gc‘f~ \\\\l // é’i«; !{lzfifl (AN ik o~ 7 ) Diisss €, it Fo N e L el ING 1 5 " éfj’f '; 7il Wyer . ‘,\t %/ e ‘%’ \ "st ;‘.‘,‘! f’ XiP o w i | 3 o .Al A Lo Sl -”/‘;/ ’/”; Xsel P\ v:’, kol W o Ay aa f”f/ T e TS M. 7ENE AL . = e ; : ¢ sl P . ©o (m . ) ekl o.W< o e . weo v o EROESTARE | MADE —~NOT BORN, e mgiw&\.mk ican’s taste and food, and in great measure his mode of living, is a never-ceasing source of wonder, The American resident in France, on the other hand, finds little crouble in adapting to his own life what he considers the best elements in French living, He likes French food, when he can add to it corn on the cob and other western delicacies, and he likes French wines. At least two Americans in Paris have achieved note even among their French cclleagues by their authoritative knowledge of bouquets and vin tages. Nevertheless. it is a faet that R TWL T ATAAATE TG EAAN & | B S@IET_LMANfiv b " Ty meron ~_.'_:filf’ : s R {. SR i ":.f_‘;: Yhe ACTOR|E P . | B e ’F e s 00 R N 3 ; r?@ o y e A R — . . e COLLEGE MAN e 2 - r’ ,i g Je CHAUFFEUR portrays & dashing role wears this | hat because he is pastmaster of the art of impressing his fellow men. He knows that every change of hat is a change of personality. The society man, the *clubfel low,” wears his high hat tilted well back. He is suave, confident, poised., He knows that no other article of apparel is so closely] bound up with the social courte gsies and proprieties. For centuries§ his hat has been the first concern } of a gentlem2n, ‘ | The Marine looks you straight in | lthe eye under the brim of his seryice hat. His hat is a primaryl PAGE SEVEN - I e the permanent American colon; of 25,000 in Paris supports & large “little pig sausage” efbére prise run by a forfir 4;",,;5;“ States navy officer, half a dogen or more purely American restate rants, a dczen shops where ican delicatessen g%ecialtiu as tomato catsup, pork and beans and ‘deviled ham are solw, and American tailor shops whmtfi stranger in a strange land may have the Broadway, or Fifth aves auae tw:st, as the cdse may be, to his lapels. The colony has pone one bets ter; it has “taughf§ the Freneh who ‘an 'years agp knew little asout them, to like! cocketails. e % 5 STUDENTS CLEAN ROOMS GREENVILLE, Téenn— (AP) — Students at Tusculum College here get a ho'liday, *“McCormick Day,” each Februaty 8, to clean the’r rooms, buildings and cam pus. i ; : coll . s ] e Bg N b 3RL R 7 e E i B ¥ . TR ¥ 557”‘“:' B “dg : ) w 0 | f i sgl { E TR L o 4*' e . 4 4 I R i o O e ST i W i [ R S R S S S v ,afif\% S e L e e g / 3 \i;i;{\gél R . t L {1 = Jher, 1-) i | - 4 Cli ; COWBOY/) | i i - i ’neccs.sity for guarding health &nd for the assured smartness of his appearance; and:‘he wears {8 straight on his head because he meets things straight and knows no fear. Without his ten gallon adorns ment the cowboy could not withe stand the alternate sun and rain of the plains. But he tilts it back a bit just to let everybody know he is notoriously proud of its looks, The chauflfeur wears his snappy headpiece because it is part of his business to preserve sureness of sight and necatness of appearance. IHis eyes are shielded from the | glare by the vigor which also adds | % g | an almost military precision to his ; salute. | The college maniknows that his : hat worn straight with just a big | of a tilt back shows the conservas I tive, forceful man who knows whag i he wants and gets it, so he trains his hat that way at an early age ag a forerunner of su¢cess. o —BY WILLIAMS