Newspaper Page Text
Pa*e Two.
THE ATHENS DAILY HERALD.
TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 10, 1914.
ELECTION NOTICE
Subject to the democratic primary,
J respectfully announce for re-elec
tion to the offiec of tax collector of
Clarke county. II. II. LINTON.
For Tax Collector Clarke County.
I hereby announce my candidacy
for the office of Tax Collector of
Clarke county, subject to the action
of the Democratic party.
• \V. A. MALLORY.
FOR SHERIFF.
I hereby announce for re-election
as Sheriff of Clarke county, subject
to the democratic primary. If elected
Mr. J. H. Hancock will continue to
be deputy.
Respectfully,
WALTER E. JACKSON.
FOR CLERK SUPERIOR COURT.
I respectfully announce my candi
dacy for re-election to the office of
Clerk of the Superior Court of Clarke
county, subject to the action of the
Democratic party.
ELMEP. J. CRAWFORD.
FOR TREASURER.
I hereby announce that I am a
candidate to succeed myself as Treas
urer of Clarke county. I shall abide
the action of the Democratic pri
mary.
Respectfully,
* E. I. SMITH.
FOR TAX RECEIVER.
I respectfully announce that I am a
candidate for re-election to the of
fice of Tax Receiver of Clarke county,
my candidacy being: made subject to
the action of the party.
J. H. DORSEY.
FOR CORONER.
I announce respectfully that I. am a
candidate for re-election as Coroner,
subject to the primary’s results.
C. N. WEATHERLY.
FOR SURVEYOR.
I am a candidate to succeed myself
as County Surveyor, subject to the
Democratic primary.
Respectfully,
BEN H. BARROW.
Congress should postpone consid-
. eration of the tolls exemption ques
tion until June, that being the mari
time month.—Ex.
WITH THE ATHENS SCHOOLS
Edited by Mrs. Aggie Dean Rader.
OCONEE
STREET
SCHOOL
f Two
Lumpkin
Stores
Oireei 264-288
For Rent,
Reasonable
To Good
Tenants.
Apply
E. W. CARROLL,
Biuineu Manager,
The Athens Herald
PHONE 1216
FREE SODA TICKETS.
For the best suggestion for
a name for my soda fount, lo
cated in Moore’s Cash Gro
cery, 225 South Lumpkin St.,
•I will give fifty soda water
tickets. All suggestions must
be received on or before the
10th of February. \V. A. E.
Church, 225 South Lumpkin
St. tf
Don't
Depend
Upon Signs
You can rent your
rooms quicker, get
better boarders
easier by giving
an ad. to the Want
Ad. Mam
' Phone 1216
Sentences from First Grade.
Our flowers in the yard are fixing
to bloom. Wc have some buttercups
and hyacinths. Henry is cutting the
hedge.
We have a new bell now. We have
to be in line by the time the bell stops
ringing. The piano begins as soon as
the bell stops ringing. We like to
march by the music.
We haven’t had any tardies this
week.
We are going to have a Valentine
party next Monday night. Anybody
who brings ten cents can come. We
are going to have lots of fun.
We are going to have a po3t office.
We can send Valentines through the
post office.
We want to buy a Victrola for our
school.
First Grade—Section IL
We are learning a new song. It Is
about Mrs. Do and her neighbors. She
lives in the third space on the staff.
We like to sing this song.
We are still trying to write our
spelling nicely. I have a star for ev
ery lesson we have written.
Mamma and papa thinks I write
nicely. Miss Frances says I do too.
We will soon be through the book
we have been reading. Then we will
get a nice new one.
We are all trying not to be tardy
any more this year. I hope none of
us will ever come in late.
Every child in the room can say and
write the second table. Now we are
learning a new one.
We are going to have a Valentine
party over here next week. I want to
come. I know we will have a good
time. Wc want all who can to come
to our party. We are going to buy
a nice Victrola for our school. We atl
think that will b2 fine.
Sentences From Second Grade.
We are reading in our new books
now. We like our new reading book.
Wc are going to have a big Valen
tine party Mohday night and we hope,
everybody will come. We are going
to play games and send Valentines.
Then we are going to have refresh
ments. I know we will have a good
time.
Miss Marion gave us our first li
brary books last Friday. We like to
read them.
Miss Marion gave us some tooth
past* last week. She is going to give
a prize to the one who keeps hands,
face and teeth the cleanest everyday.
W sre all trying to get it.
Be sure and come to our Valentine
party.
Oconee Street School.
Isn't it fine that the boya haven’t
had an absence in two weeks—and for
good marching they got the banner?
Our single hyacinth* have been
blooming nicely. We have set out sev
eral geraniums. Our flowers in the
yard are blooming nicely too.
We have a new electric bell. It sure
is a fine one.
We have two new pupils. Their
names axa Inez Mize and Daisy Chan
dler.
Our janitor has been sick and Henry
took his place.
FLORA BAILEY,
Fourth Grade.
Oconee Street School.
The boys haven’t had an absence for
two weeks and they got the banner
for good marching.
The girls haven’t had a tardy this
gear.
We hava some flowers in our school
room.
Our hylsclnths are open, they are
pretty.
Our electric bell has been put up.
We have two new pupils. Their
names are Inez Mize and Daisy Chan
dler.
Our janitor has been sick for three
weeks, but ha is able to come this
week.
We hava soma geraniums in our
LIFE OF THE INDIANS
By CATHERINE AKERMAN
Fourth Grade Baxter Stre e t School.
When Columbus started out
meant to go to India, and when he
came to America he thought he was
in India.
In America he found a copper-col.
ored race of people and called them
Indians.
The Indians had great forests and
deep lakes. SomA tribes lived in the
prairie. These tribes had wigwams
made of deer skin. Others lived in
houses made of clay. These houses
were so large that sometimes twenty
families could live in one. There were
some tribes that lived in bark houses,
and the ones that lived in the moun-
he tains dwelled in caves. The warriors
wore leggins made of deer skins. All
of them wore moccasins. They wore
blankets in the winter.
The squaws wore short skirts and
necklaces made of wampum. In the
summer they ate fruits, corn and
meat. In the winter they ate meat
and corn, and when they had nothing
else, acorns.
The Indian men went hunting. They
fished and went to war, too. The wo
men did all the work around the
house. They hoed com and gathered
nuts. The boys did not w'ork. The
girls helped their mothers in all their
work.
BAXTER
STREET
SCHOOL
THE STORY OF THE INDIANS
By GEORGE MORTON;
Fourth Grade Baxter Stre e t School.
When Columbus discovered Ameri
ca he found people with red skins and
he called them Indians because he
thought he had landed in India. Amer
ica in those days had big forests ana
did not have cities and street cars and
automobiles.
The homes that the Indians lived in
were wigwams, caves or pueblos.
The Indians wore bear skins and
deer skins and feathers in their hair.
They wore moccasins made of deer
skins.
The Indian men hunted and the wo
men worked in the fields and did the
work around the wigwams.
The Indians raised corn and beans
and pumpkins.
In the summer they ate corn and
beans fruits and berries.
And in -winter they ate deer and
bear meat and fish and pumpkins.
The Indians hunted bears and deers
and buffalos and porcupines.
They made their wigwams out of
buffalo skins and they ate the meat
and wore the skins.
NANTAHALA SCHOOL
Only the fifth grade can send news
this week, but next week there will
be new, from every class.
Fifth Grade.
We have had a good attendance this
month. Lillie Stevens has been sick
and we are glad to have her back with
Allene Davis, Arthur Duncan,
Leila Partee, Josephine Hicks, Gor
don Hubbard have received 100 in
spelling so far this month.
The boys have organized 1 baseball
teams and they play every day at re
cess. The girls enjoyed watching them
play. We are learning some songs
and speeches for Washington’s birth
day and Georgia Day.
he fourth and fifth grades got G
on music this week.
WESLEY NEWSOME,
Fourth Grade.
Oconee Street School.
We have two new pupils. Their
names are Inex Mize and Daisy Chan,
dler. The boys have not had an ab
sence in two weeks. The girls have
never had a tardy. We have a new
janitor. His name is Henry. Our old
Janitor. Joe, has been real sick.
We have a new electric bell and
we like it better than our old one. We
have planted some peranimu cuttings-
The fourth grade boys are carrying
the banner for good marching. Our
hyacinths have been blooming but they
have stopped.
The fourth grade is in long division
in arithmetic. And this last week we
have had singular and plural forma
EDUCATION NOTES
"Mothercraft” is becoming a prom
inent subject in the elementary
schools of England.
In Denmark the school teacher Is
almost always furnished with a house,
barn and a few acres of land, accord
ing to W. H. Smith, a recent observ
er from the United States Bureau of
Education. “The tenure of office of
the teacher is for life or gpty! be
havior, and 76 per cent of theCrural
teachers are men who settle down in
their respect!W communities, culti
vate the small farm, act as choristers
in the country djiurch and easily and
naturally beconfe leaders in affairs.”
Community music Is the latest in
cooperation. The pastor of a church
in Locust Volley, N. Y., found that
the church, the school and the young
people’s organizations were spending
a total of about $ 1 ,.'100 per year for
music without getting the best re
sults. At his suggestion they pooled
their funds and secured for $100 a
month the services of n competent
music director who spends two days
a week in Locust Valley, organizing
and directing the music for the
church and school, training a chil
dren's choir, giving monthly musical
entertainments and developing a
choral society.
Pupils in the Dickerson high school,
Jersey City, went to school from 4:30
in the afternoon to 10 o’clock at
night on one occasion lately, in
that the adult members of their fami
lies might see the school plant in ope
ration. Over 16,000 citizens took ad
vantage of the opportunity olfercd by
Superintendent Snyder to see what
the high school was actually doing.
The school program was carried out
in the regular order, including the
serving of the school luncheon about
the middle of the session.
RETAIL GROCERS
MET LAST
The Athens Retail Grocers* Asso
ciation met last night to further per
fect the organization. The meeting
was ^dressed by Mayor Dorsey and
M r (f Si Morris, a traveling grocery
salesman. Several local merchants
addressed the meeting and a discus
sion was had of matters affecting the
association.
Messrs. Abney, Bowden and Stone
were named as a committee to draft
by-laws for. the organization. The
association will meet again on Thurs
day evening in the office of the Mer
chants’ Paper Company.
The association has been organized
for mutual benefit and for the pur
pose of systematizing the buying and
other details of the grocery business
in Athens in a way that will prove
helpful to customers.
Colds, constipation and headache are
three common afflictions and relieving
the constipation helps the cold and
stops the headache. Use Foley Ca
thartic Tablets because they are very
prompt and thoroughly cleansing,
with absolutely no unpleasant effects.
A whole bottle full for 26 cents.
For sale by All Druggists Every
where. (Adv.)
Each class in the Fairmont (W.
Va.) high school is named for some
prominent citizen of the city. The
citizen thus designated is known as
the class sponsor, the class bearing
his name instead of the usual class
numerals. The sponsor takes a per
sonal interest in the class. He en
tertains them once or twice during
their junior and senior years, and
assists them in different ways in
their various class enterprises. In
some instances sponsors have been
successful in keeping boys and girls
in school who would otherwise have
dropped out.
School janitors in Salt Lake county,
Uh, meet together in “institutes”
every year to discuss the technical
side of their work.
The Athens Herald
a week. Pay caiTter.
10c
THREE HUNDRED NEW PUPILS.
More than three hundred children
have entered the public schools since
Christmas.
First Grade.
Our “2 Circle” is almost full.
Charles Morris, Charles Hutcheson,
Alice Rowland, Sam Locklin, Scott
Eppes, Fannie May Teat, (Jus Locklin
Annie Flo Parnell, John Snelling, Gu3
Witcher, Corine Jackson, Madison
Nicholson, Louise Reeves, Emma D.
Marshall, Thomas St. John, Elf rede
Akerman. Sara Bishop. Jack Carlton,
Mary Holt Park, Rebecca Fowler,
Kathleen Miller, Gaillard Phillips,
Jack Bolton, William Hart, Elizabeth
Ginn and Elizabeth Messer and Talia
ferro Conway are the names that are
in this week.
Jack Bolton pot the first head mark
in spelling.
Section 3 has the greatest number
of try marks.
Miss Clyde teaches us nice games.
All the little girls and boys who
had 100 in spelling and a star for nice
papers went visiting today. We hope
everybody will get to go tomorrow.
Description of a Person.
The person I am going to describe
is brown hair and brown eyes. She
is tall and is always good to the
children and the children all like her.
She always is clean and she never
is tardy. And l like her all right and
everybody else does too. She always
is good to the children and she likes
the children that have been in her
grade. Guess who she is?
CHARLIE H. H.
First Grade.
We are going to make a volcano to-
cano today.
We got a star for music.
The boys won in spelling.
The first grade and second helped
build Mt. Vesuvius.
We are about through our reading
books now.
We will make the volcano go off
with powder today.
HUGH STANLEY,
Third Grade.
Seventh Grade.
A report from the seventh grade
has not appeared on the school page
since 1914 has dawned upon us, but
to tell you frankly, we have been so
busy that we forgot that others want
ed to hear from us through the school
page. A better way by which you
can learn of us is to come to see
We are sorry to report five ab
sentees for today and several others
during last week, but we are safe
in saying that most of these absences
were and are due to sickness.
We began with 22 pupils in Septem
ber. Now our attendance numbers 26.
A fuller report will you see in our
next school page.
PROF. BOND WILL
ATTEND MEETING
ELY'S CREAM BALM OPENS CLOGGED
NOSTRILS AND HEAD—CATARRH GOES
Instantly Clears Air Passages; You
Breathe Freely, Nasty Discharge
Stops, Head Colds and Dull Head
ache Vanish.
Get a small bottle anyway, just to
try it—Apply a little in the nostrils
and instantly your clogged nose and
stopped-up air passages of the head
will open; you will breathe freely;
dullness and headache disappear. By
morning! the catarrh, cold-in-the-head
or catarrhal sore throat will be gone.
End such misery now! Get the small
bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any
drug store. This sweet, fragrant
balm dissolves hv the hea? ,,f i
trils; penetrates and hoaL
ed, swollen membrane \vhi« L i
nose, head and throat; ol t . ar .‘
passages; stops nasty disehari
a feeling of cleansing, soot Em
comes immediately.
Don’t lay away tonight
for breath, with head
closed, hawking and blowing i
or a cold, with its running no
mucous dropping into the thro
raw dryness is distressing j..,
needless.
Put your faith—just r.
“Ely’s Cream Iialrp” and your
catarrh will surely disappear.
’• foul
t, and
truly
I mi
Prof. Bond will attend the meeting
of the department of superintendents
in Richmond, Va., which will be held
February 23.
This meeting is held once a year for
the purpose of discussing methods and
policies of school administration. Ev
erything pertaining to schools is dis
cussed. All new experiments are ex
plained and considered.
Last year this meeting occurred in
Philadelphia.
Dinner is served to the girls who
come to the evening classes in the
Washington Irving high school, New
York City. Instead of going to pub
lie restaurants the girls come direct
ly from work to the school, and
spend the intervening time in the
“gym” or reading rooms.
of nouns in English. We had pen
manship yesterday.
MARV M. SULLIVAN,
Fourth Grade.
WHEN YOUR LIVER GOES WRONG
TAKE DODSON’S LIVER TONE
Everybody Nerd* a Liver Stimulant
at Some Time or Another. Your
Druggist Guarantees Dodaon’a
Lirer Tone.
Nearly everybody now and then is
annoyed with a sluggish, lazy liver or
by constipation or by biliouznesz.
It is for this reason that Dodson's
Liver .Tone is such a good medicine
to keep always in the house.
Either children or grown-ups can
take Dodson’s Liver Tone without
bad after-effects and without restric
tion of habit or diet. It is a vege
table liquid with a pleasant taste, and
a sure reliever ox constipation and
liver troubles. It entirely takes the
place of calomel.
All druggists who sell Dodson
Liver Tone guarantee every bottle
to please you and start your liver
without violence. It costs 60 cents
per bottle and if you are not sat
isfied that it is more than worth the
money, the drug man will hand your
half dollar back to you with a smile.
Don’t be fooled by preparations
imitating the claims of Dodson’s
Liver Tone. Just remember any
druggist will give you hack your
money if Dodson’s Liver Tone fails
you. That is a guarantee that guar
antees. /fill V.f
THE CITIZEN’S PHARMACY
offers the service of its well trained and experienced
pharmacists in caring for your health, and meeting
your every want in the drug line.
A modern store, kept in good condition, care ex
ercised in the filling of prescriptions, coupled with
moderate prices, makes the service incomparable.
Get acquainted with us—avail yourself of this
up-to-date service; it means money in your pocket
and complete satisfaction all around.
Citizens’ Pharmacy
Corner Clayton and Jackson Streets
ATHENS, - - - GEORGIA
“Read Herald Want Ads”
ATHENS PAPER COMPANY
WHOLESALE ONLY
Flour, Meal, Shorts, Lard.ChewingTobacco,
Brooms, Paper Bugs, Twines, Wrapping
Papers, Wizard Floor Clean, Stationery, Etc.
ATHENS PAPER COMPANY
Thomas Street
Athens, Georgia
Service
ATHENS AUTO SALES AND REPAIR CO.
WE
STORE, WASH AND
REPAIR YOUR CAR
Complete Repair Department. Personal Attention
Given All Work.
We have auto rent
cara connected; good
cars, careful driven
We have all kind* of automobile iup-
pliez. We sell guaranteed 3.500-milc
tire* 15 to 20 per cent lew than znf
other tire on the market.
CALL US WHEN IN TROUBLE
140 Eaat Waahington Street
Phone 767jj
IF
Phone
1216
You cound (although, of course, you can't) stop
every man you meet on the streets and a.-k ra
if he wanted to buy your house—you rot*
find the right man. but the chances arc 'J'JD 10
that you wouldn’t, but if you will put your
Want Ad in The Heralj
you are sure to reach the right people bee®
the right people are the very ones who are 100
ing tor your ad