Newspaper Page Text
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ATHENS BANNER, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 6, 1921.
MGE TKREk
PRESIDENT HARDING
Says “Practice Economy ”
WE SAY BUY AT “PIGGLY WIGGLY”
Yor,r Pi \ g t l Iy W i ggIy 8t ° re ! duri r g Marc t 8O,d I $4 - 699 - 535 06 worth of food products to its customers.
If ^ mt ? hes - ? ur b “ 8i " e « i * fine. We are giving YOU EXCELLENT prices.
Everything is 1*1^ 2*"^
Grapelade
*??r
Hirsch’s Piccalette i
28c
No. 2 Red Pitted Cherries .i
39c
No. 1 Malaga Grape
43c
Olive Zest
19c
Dutch Cleanser
10c
Red Devil Lye
12c
Carmelo Tea, 1-4-pound
10c
Jap Rose Soap
10c
Fletcher’s Castoria
34c
Syrup of Figs
47c
Tetley’s Orange Pekoe Tea, 1-2-pound
38c
Campfire Marshmallows, 6-oz r .
17 l-2c
Parsons’ Household Ammonia
17c
Sunbeam Queen Olives, medium
17c
Golden Age Noodles
7 l-2c
Lux
12c.
Maillards’ Cocoa, 1-2-pound
31c
Kellogs’ Corn Flakes
10c
Pillsbury’s Health Bran
18c
Plazanst’s Boneless Sardine, pure Olive oil
38c
r
A FEW OF OUR PRICES
1200 Others Just As Good
Take Advantage of These
Prices Today
Standard Granulated Sugar *7
per pound ■ - - 1 C
Best Creamery Butter
per pound
. 39c
Wesson Oil,
Quarts
39c
No, 10 Snowdrift
Lard
$1.02
Armours Sliced Box
&A~
Bacon, pound
Sandwich Puree
Kellog’s Krumbled Bran
18c
18c
Rodier s Mushrooms
38c
Pineapple Cheese, medium
R9r
Nippy Cheese
17c
Pratt’s Buttermilk Chick Feed
27c
Royal Scarlet Shrimp
28c
White Rose Asparagus
?.Rr
Beechnut Peanut Butter, medium
15c
No. 2 Lima Beans
9 U?r
McMemanis’ Deviled Crabs
43c
Bakers’ Canned Cocoanut
Ur
Beechnut Jellied Fruits—all aflvors
.28c
Moro Molasses
19c
Calumet Baking Powder, 1-pound
26c
Royal Baking Powder, large
42c
60c Liquid Veneer
42c
Roquefort chees, jars
29c
Pure Italian Olive Oil, pints
78c
Morning Joy Coffee, 3-pounds
99c
College Avenue
AN EXCELLENT LINE OF FRESH VEGETABLES AND FRUITS
TWO STORES Broad Street
A
SPECIAL for Sunday Din
ner Walnut Bisque Ice
Cream. Phone your order
Today. COSTA’S. Phone
69a L
Red Cross Feeds
Americans Held
Prisoner Moscow
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH.
Corner Hancock anil Lumpkin.
Rev. Walter Anthony, i’nator.
Sumlay school nt 10 o'clock shrd
Sunday school at 10 a. m., .Mr. £. J.
Hondurant, Snpt.
At the 11:15 morning oorvlco tha
pastor will preach, the subject being
"The .Motherhood of the Church."
The pastor will hold an evangelistic
service nt the evening hour. X o'clock.
The mid week prayer meeting will
ho hold on Wednesday evening at 8
o'clock.
CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Samuel .1. Cartledge, Pastor.
Mr. J. T. Dudley. Superintendent of
Sunday School. !
Mr. Hugh L Hodgson. Organist and,
Director of .Music.
Sunday school at 9: <5 a. m. |
At the morning service .Mr. L. W
Jnmion and .Mr. J. F. Hart, Jr., will,
present the Synod's Educational Pro
gram.
The Pastor will preach at Winder
at 11 a. m., hut will return In tho
afternoon and conduct the usual even
ing service at 8:30 o'clock.
Christian Endeavor'societies at 3:30
and 7:30 p. m.
p. m. The Pastor will till the pulpit
at both of theBO services.
Sunday school at First Cburcli at
9:45 a. m„ J. A. Morton, Hupt.; nt Lane
Chapel at 3:30 p. m., Howard Scott,
Supt.; at Hoyt Chapel at 3:30 p. m.,
E. A. McWhorter. Supt.
Prayer meeting on Wednesday aft
ernoon at « o'clock.
Please tako note of tho hours of
tho evening service und tho prayer
meeting.
A cordial invitation Is oxtended to
all of thoso services.
EMMANUEL CHURCH.
Rev. A. O. Richards, D. D . Rector.
Holy Communion at 7:30 a. hi.
Sunday School at 9:45 a m.
Morning Prayer and Sermon at 11
o'clock.
Evening Prayer and Sermon at 8:39
o'clock.
EVANGELINE LAND ADDS SUMMERSCHOOI, TO VACATION PROGR AM
:ur*
(Special to The Banner)
Washington, U. C., May 6.—Atner
and under his spiritual leadership tha I leans held prisoner in Moscow by tho
church will undertake still greater snv | pt government are being fed j
things. That ho will measure up to , !
all responsibilities is confidently ox-1 ,hc °< th8 American
to«! . H<*il Cross. The food in boing sent in
«!lre of the pastor that | , 1 hr ‘"'K» *"? Vi,rlou " cour,er 8nrvlfc "
It in the d«
every niombr i of tho church. who ran
possibly do so, attend these first
services.
The public is cordially invited to
all services which are held at tho
High school auditorium on Prince
avenue.
OCONEE STREET METHODIST
CHURCH.
A. F. Nunn, Pastor.
Sunday school at 10 a. in., promptly
that have been Inaugurated between
1 Baltic purls and Moscow by LatvJan
j and Esthonian agencies.
Co!. Edwurd W. Ryan, of Scranton,
| Pa.. American Red Cross commln
! sioner to the Raltlc States, has no- 1
I tiflfd national headquarters here that |
j food has been, forwarded to tho Amer- [
I Iran captives in Moscow for several i
j months and that It is believed the j
j greater part of it reaches tho men and j
j women to whom it is consigned. In |
rtain instances receipts for this foo l j
teachers teach each class. Come!
Preaching of the Gospel nt 11 a.
and 8 p. m.
j Prayer services on Wednesday
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. | $ »». »«. Wo study ‘.he sixth chaptoi
(JnuHusJ Interest atta hes t» the ! °f ^ho Book of Acts,
announcement that T)r. .1. C. Wilkin*
BOO. tb. now pastor. will or, up,- the | P"'NCE AVENUE BAPTIST
pulpit, preaching at both the morning i CHURCH,
and evening services. At the morn ! K. H. Jennings, Pastor,
ing hour, 11:16 o'clock, his them-, j s B wingfkld, Sunday School Su
perintendent.
E. I*. Stone, Superintend, lit. Capable | haV( , been received by Colonel Ryan
apparently bearing the slgna'ure of j
‘•[(’apt. Emmett Kilpatrick, former j
j American Red Cross . relief worker.'
t | who Is said to be-aervlng a twenty-1
r j year prison sentence Imposed by tho j
j soviet authorities. From other sojrces j
I also It Is learned that Red Cross par- |
! cels seem to be reaching the ad-I
dressers, in addition to fowl, cloth- j
[ ing and other necessities have been |
forwarded to Moscow by tho Red I
Cross.
- - A ■ :• - '
Afiies of Apple SVbjrcynr W . N. S'
Baseball Results.
will be "The Royal Life"
evening hour. 8:30 o'clock, his sub
YOUNG HARRIS MEMORIAL Bet will be "A Storm Religion."
W CHURCH. 1 Dr. Wilkinson comes to Athens after
Boulevard and Chase streets. j a successful paHorato of some v-'ar., B Vea t sertices' ColltSTSmra.
» M. QuHMan. Pastor. y ! **«*K«J| * “ I | At Sparta^ S.T-Clemson 4.
Ihitlor radV^A Whitten. .Sup.Tin-| The committee appointed hv the I Sunday school meets at 10 a. in , Wofford 7.
iDow. ’ church to select a pastor to Oil the I bervicc evangelistic. ‘At Vicksburg, Miss.—Miss, college
Drenching hv the Pa-tor at 11 a.' vs-ancy made by the resignation of | Y. P. 11. s meet , p. m. j g. La. State 0.
, rn j Dr. J W. Lynch, after some months! Evening service nt 8 p m. J At Tusealoosa.-Oglethorpe 1. Ala
Montldv P meeting of Stewards at 3 i of dellVrsDon and consideration, with I rll « revive will rontlnue throug.i bama 8.
, I?n,.r an des res"full attend- «milt,.Bed authority and with the an-1 Tuesdty evening with preadhlng each . At Atlanta, Ga.-N. C. State 0.
" ' ms Ln I i t'rn south as a field from which to evening at 8 o'clock. Georgia Tech 10.
SLcWTr.in in- class taught by: make a selection, decided that he was! .. 7~~ 7hTc7 Z «L At New York.-d'ordham 8, Unlv. of
, parnest at T D m ' pro mlnently the man for the pulpit. Reports show that of the French mil-j Virginia 2.
P n !■' L E *7£! on Wednesday at of the Fir,t Baptist church Their Itary < las-: or 1921 more than seventy-, At New Haven. Conn.-West Vlr
Prayer meeting on _w ™»_ ti | unanlmnii.lv »«.( five per cent consists of youths 20 j glnia-Yale. rain.
, ... ,,, years of age who are fit for military I At Charleston, 8. C —Newberry col-
Dunaway and Miss Ho uuma wiiiiam --
son. committee. These mid-week
services are made very Interesting
and helpful, and are attended with
good Interest. invitation Is 1 cil hv the leaders of Georgia Baptists! farms and the spread of sports In ! lege 3. Va. Polytechnic Inst. 2.
. !e n rvices r. superb organlxer. a man of a< ; i-Yance. ! „ ,
tractive culture and a preacher Ot ^ : — The ralafn^ of mutihrooniK In l»eer
marked ability. Eighteen gigantic fossilized turtles i vatu in becoming auch an important In*
n n ,. aH | 0 r A great opportunity for ageresiive | of an unknown specie* have been tin* 1 dustry that grower* nre calling for tar*
Rev. E. is. Min. v i.. * t c .j ir | Bt | lln WO rk i» op«‘n 10 blra her*? earthed near Vnlencia, Spain. Iff protection.
church. Their
IJ7b directed by Fred Bell. Artie j recommendation was unanimously en-
.,u p. nI . uire 1 . 1 vviniam- 1 dorsed by the church In conference
inaway and Miss 1 — an ,| t | |e invitation to the pastorate | service. This Is a high percentage of i lege 17, College of Charleston 2.
extended to Dr. Wilkinson and ac- j effectives and the increase is attrlbut- At Nashville, Tenn.—Vanderbilt 16.
rented by him. i *'■ to a decrease in the use of alcohol,! Howaid college 1.
He comes to Athi ns highly endors-j the Improved living conditions on j At Blacksburg, Va.—Guilford col-
- Nova Scotians have prepared an
other attraction for Evangeline
Land, already so popular as a vaca-
, tion center. This is for students.
Historic Acadia College in Wdf-
ville is to keep its doors open dur
ing summer months and offer a
curriculum of such latitude that it
; is bound to appeal to students who
desire to combine study and out-
j ing, particularly music and art.
' Acadia College was founded by
’ the Baptists in 1838. Its educa-
tional ideals and methods are
! largely American and it has amlia-
; tiom: in tho United States. The
institution has grown in wealth arul
• numbers snd has grouped about It
' large schools for boys and girls
j No more delightful seating for a
seat of learning could be chosen
. than. Wolfville, a singularly pretty
town in the pleasant orchard coun
try near Grand Pre, made classic
by Longfellow’s “Evangeline.”
Each succeeding aummer brings
greater numbers of artists, writers
and summer tourists to this valley
so rich in historical romance. A
tour of picture exhibitions of east
ern cities will reveal many charm
ing canvases inspired by the quiet
beauty of Nova Scotia; far-flung
vistas of appls orchards vailed in
pink and white blossoms or bending
under tha weight of ripened fruit;
quaint fishing villages and quainter
inhabitants; clumsy two-wheeled
water carts drawn by dignified
oxen; wide atretches of red mud
flats on which sailing boats ride
high and dry at low tide; and fleeta
of fishing boats floating on silver
seas, their sails dipping like great
gulls. •/__
This is a land beloved of eports-
men for just a step back from tha
cultivated valleys lie almost unex-
ploited fishing and hunting
grounds. Kedgemakoogee Club ia
a name to conjure with among tha
initiated. Many a proud antlered
moose haa won immortality by
falling at the hand of an American
who displays the bend upon his.
office wall.
Cabin settlements and country:
hotels provide pleasant, reasons bfy-
priced accommodation for hundreds
who annually seek the healthful
pleasures of this fsr eastern prov
ince. Acadia College’s new pro
gram opens a way for students
who wish to pursue their studies
during vacation months and yet
have tha benefit of a change of
acswi, ._
extended to all these services.
FIR8T PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Rev. E. L. Illll. D D.. Pastor.
(T*ual *ervlr**» at 11 a. ni. auu
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