Newspaper Page Text
The live store is known by its live windows.
They reflect the up-to-date character of the man and
merchandise within.
They sound an invitation with an implied assurance of
good sendee.
Storekeepers know their friends are interested in news
paper advertising.
They know that if a manufacturer advertises his goods
in the newspapers of their city, people will want to see these
goods.
So they show the newspaper advertised brand in the
windows and incidentally show their own “liveness.”
have pity, |
WHO SIR.
POOft
I LU.
TtUta
THROW ’tR-
IHTO HI6H,
, PAP!
THE ATHENS HAIT/V HERALD.
THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 7, 1915.
Page Seven.
E1ALQ WAITS
FOR SALE—Real Estate.
MADISON COUNTY FARM—Locat
ed 7 miles from Athens, contains 30
j^res, has 3-room house and outbuild
ings, 20 acres in cultivation, balance
m woods and pasture, good white |
neighborhood, and a bargain
$27.50 per acre.
HOMER STARK,
310 Sou. Mut. Bldg. Phone 13411
i HERALD MTTEMS
Address Pattern Dept,
The Athens Herald
Believe It or Not—
FOR SALE—Sewing Machines.
ATHENS CYCLE CO., 27D Lumpkin, I
has a new Royal and a new Wilson
sewing machine fop sale at $25 each,
with a 10-year guarantee to be as
good as any machine sold. o24c |
FOR SALE—Gas Range.
FOR SALE—High oven gas range;
almost new; cheap. Apply 740 Han
cock avenue. oTp
MOTORCYCLE BARGAINS
WE HAVE some bargains in used
motorcycles—Indian, Harley-Davi-
son and Popes. Athens Cycle Co. o7c
FOR SALE—Syrup.
1476
London, England.---Midshipman Lance has been decorated for bravery displayed
while serving as a member of the crew of the British superdreadnaught "Queen Eliza
beth”-.-engaged with the British fleet in the attempt to force the Dardanelles. Lance
leaped from an open boat and pushed a floating mine from the path of a cutter.
H76—A becoming Dress for Moth
ers Girl. Girls’ Dress with
Sleeve in Either of Two
Lengths.
This charming model has the front
in. attractive shaping, forming
pointed extension over the belt The
jollar is new and in Quaker style.
The sleeve in wrist length is good
for cool weather. The short sleeve
is comfortable and attractive with its
pretty shaped cuif. The stpie is good
’or gingham, galatea, percale, chain
brey, lawn, linen, serge, repp, poplin
or cashmere. The pattern is cut i
izes: 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. It
'A yards of 44 inch materia’
WANTED—Every family ir. Athens, - -
to buy one gallon of pure cane f or an 8 year size,
syrup, made from filtered juice. Or- A Pattern of this illustration
ders can be phoned to King-Hodgson toailed to any address on receipt
Co. Jas W. Morton, R. P. D. No. 1 | 10c in silver or stamps.
ollc
OLD NEWSPAPERS.
FOIt SALE—Old newspapers, tied in
bundles of 100 at 10c bundle; three
for 25c. Call at Herald Business Of
fico. || |
FOR RENT—Rooms.
No
Name
Street and No.
City
Size.
FOR RENT—Rooms in Herald build-1
tag, furnished or unfurnished. Ap-
- ■ tfl
ply at Business office.
OH,YHum>£R‘:
HELP WANTED—Male.
WANTED—Student ■who needs work)
and who has had exphrleifco Id giri-j
era] line of merchandise—to work
Saturdays for Broad street store. |
Apply own handwriting, state exper-
icnce. Merchant, care Herald. pds I
SITUATION WANTED—MaicJ
RESPECTABLE young man is anx
ious for any kind of work. Address
"Work,’’ care The Herald. o8c|
SITUATION WANTED — Fe
male.
WANTED—Situation as housekeeper!
or nurse for invalid. Address “E.’ r
care The Herald. o8e|
LOST—Spinx Pin.
LOST—Spinx pin, Wednesday morn
ing. Finder teturn to Banner of-
omce, qGc
Y'Sie. VH' Ouy WENT TO
ms lawycil."my wtve-
TREATS ME LIKE A Coq
on. A HORSE Oft A, Pie,"
•SAYS. «6;-"| want eft /-
Divoftcfc”
50 TELL
WELL,'PE LAWYER. LOOKEb
Wist- AN' SAYS! "Youft.
IN Ytt* WRONG PLACE _
GO TO THl SOCIETY TOR,
THE PREWENTION OT
CRUELTY TO
FOR YOUR HEALTH’S SAKE
DRINK the finest mineral water; at
six cents per gallon, delivered in
the city in five-gallon quantities.
I hone 527, J, L. Berryman. nlc|
ANIMALS!A vulaiN
WANTED AT ONCE
1 OU TO DIG up your winter clothes
from thoir summer hiding places,
»nd have them dry-cleaned and press-. ,
su. You will need them soon. LA- No. 2 leaves Athens at....7:20ajn.
GAINESVILLE MIDLAND
Effective July 11th, 1915.
(EASTERN TIME)
DIES WORK OUR SPECIALTY.
CLASSIC CITY PPRESSlNG CO,
Cor. Broad and Lumpkin Street*.
Phone 1401). pds
MONEY TO LOAN
No. 4 leaves tAhens at.... 2:80p.m
No. 1 arrives at Athens....11:25 a.m
No. 3 arrives at Athens at. .0:35 p.m.
No*. 2 and 4 connect at Belmont
for Wimmr ami monmo and inter
mediate point*, and with tho Georgia
Railroad for all points and at Caines-
rille for Gainesville A Northwestern
MONEY to loan on improved farm «t»Uon» »»<1 with Southern Railway
lands. Apply Tate Wright, Athens, '> orth a™ 1 * 0Ilt,L
Rl - o24c
UNIVERSAL AUTO
PUBLIC INVADES
HAVE YOU an automobile for aale?
if «o, let u> sell it for you. If it
repairs, wo will make them and,
cur ’ fharging only a email Craze for Speculation Breaks
I'crrent for our services. Better eee ... . .
us at once. We have tnqnlries every ^ Records. Pictured by
«y for second-hand cars. UNIVER-
C0 ” 140 Waa^gton St|
new tire hospital
DON’T FORGET the New Tire Hoa-
next door to Epps Garage,
will give you beat work for leea men-
vi«. Jr nn J? ?* 7° ur wor k and be eon-,.
&hot’ , vuk2i*eT U x r ^ S&l! An Amencan Newspaper
Kimbrough. 1 "' *° 8 * For
Wall Street
Writer and Artist in the
New York Herald
Sunday, October 10.
American People
Borrowed umbrellas cast the shad-
°f suspicion.
A full grown sheep average* on hnn
<lrcd oand fifty pounds in weight.
BEST WAR PICTURES
FROM ALL FRONTS.
Real Musical Comedy
With Humor and Plot
The Macon Telegraph of last Tues
day pays the following glowiftg trib
ute to “The Only Girl,” the mublcal
comedy coming to the Colonial thea
ter next Monday:
“It has come at last—the musical
comedy with a plot. It is true that
the introduction on the program vol
unteers the information that four
people had to colaborate to produce
‘The Only Girl,* the delightful comedy
interspersed with music .which a good
audience braved the rain to see at the
Benzonia, Mich.---Ed Pickcl, of Benzonia, went squirrel hunting today and camo
back with an empty game Bag. He said he had lost his nervo. "After 20 years of
hunting," said Pickel, "I can’t stand to shoot the little beasts any more.”
Coshocton, 0.---The potato crop is a good one in this district. It is claimed one
farmer horth of town was compelled to hitch his auto to some spuds to get them out of
the ground. ■*> !
m
>grWiFJi
PARTY SATURDAY.
The members of The Herald's
Sandman Club will be the guests
of Manager Stone at the Lyric
theater on next Saturday between
11 a. m. and 2 p. m.
THE FAIRY QUEEN’S JEWELS.
One night the elves were holding
. meeting and talking over thi
loings of the fairies, who had beer
aving a party in the dell.
“Oh, such jewels as the queer
vears!” said one elf. “I wish 1 knev
vhcre she keeps them; we woulc
teal them and wear them ourselves. 1
lo not see why we should not weai
ewels as well as the fairies. ,r
I am sure *we could easily dc
hat,” said another wicked little elf:
because the queen docs not wear hei
cwcJs in the daytime. I saw her
ittle while ago and she did not have
n one jewel.”
“We better start hunting for them,'
aid another elf; “we may not hove
uch an easy time finding them as wo
hink.”
Away scampered all the little elves,
cudding under the leaves and blades
f grass until they came to the dell
vhere the fairies live, and then they
•id and watched.
Oh, how sleepy those little elves did
et watching the fairies! They rub
ied their eyes and yawned in their
fforts to keep awake.
Won’t they ever get through
lancing and take off their jewels?”
vhispe.'cd one elf.
They never go to bed until sun*'
iso.” said another.
“Oh, there they go! Quick, follow
them now!” said another.
Away flew the fairies toward th£
iields and this time the elves were
tuick in following. They did not
reach the fields as soon as the fairies,
but they reached there in time to see
the queen taking the pearls and dia
monds and all her beautiful jewels off
and hand them to her fairies.
And then the elves opened their
yea for what did those fairies do but
drop the queen's jewels all over the
fields, and taking off their own They
did the same thing with them, and
then flew away... » \ - ; - c >
The sun was i jnst poking up his
head when the fairies left and as soon
they were out of sight, into the
fields ran tbfc elvei to gather up the
jewels the fairies hud so carelessly,
as the elves thought, scattered all
over the fields.
But not a fewcl did they find, hunt
they would; the fields were covered
with daisies and buttercups and lit
tle blue flowers and all kinds of beau
tiful blossoms, but not a jewel did
the elves find.
Old Sol laughed to himself as he
watched them hunt, and by and by
he sent down a hot ray that tent the
elves scampering home weary and
disappointed with 1|heir night's work.
o know^that tho fairies jewels are
ho daisies and buttercups and all the
•ther beautiful field flowers in the
ay-£ime. and only when the fairies
father them do they become the
swels they see them wearing at
ight.”
(Copyright, *1915, by the McClure
Newspaper Syndicate, New York
•tty.)
(Tomorrow’s Story—'•Why Maples
Uvc Syrup.**
TOY SIEGE GUNS.
Nurcmburg .October 7. German
oymakers have put on the market a
oy 16 inch gun. It is 2 feet long, and
‘t Is not a bad model of the Krupp
nonstcr and fires a small shell fifty
fards.
The shell contains a minute charge
>f powder and a fuse, and explodes
^n concussion. It falls into foi*r
nieces which can easily be put to
gether again, and the shell recharged
^or use any number of times. The
toy, complete with a supply of shells,
oats $30.
Old newspapers for sale; 10c
hundred; 300 for 25e.
CURIOUS PHENOMENA
OF FLYING BULLETS
Berlin.—One of the curiou* phenoim
ena connected with the sounds of fly
ing bullets Is the apparently double
report from theYhot of a single (run.
This is observed with special fre-
3 uency by the Austrians fighting in
te Alps against tho Italians. They
were disposed to believe the second
report was the echo of the first, but
the curious fact remained that the
second report was louder than • the
first. Moreover, the German soldiers
fighting in Belgium, where the l(ind
lies as level as a table, often heard
two reports.
Tho explanation now put forward
. that the flying bullet compacts the
air in front of it. and that this pro
duces sound waves which, when they,
first srike he car, give the effect of art
explosion. As the small calibre bul
let of the modern rifle flies consider
ably faster than sound travel*,' the
main report arrives later, and is nat
urally louder than the first.
Old newspapers for sale; 10c
t hundred; 300 for 25c.
Grand Inst night, a Iibretist, a com
poser, a farce writer and a stage man
ager, but the quadruple entepte may
well be satisfied with their effort.
-“The Only Girl,’ would do nicely
played by tho same company without
a song in it; with several of the really
delightful sort, both melodious and
clever-lined, it furnished an evening's
entertainment well worth two dollars
if any production short of an elab
orate stage spectacle is worth that
much money. Comedy there was of
.he sort that depended ust enough but
not too much on the situations devel
oped by the plot, but mainly carried
on by the refined cleverness of a real
ly notable conjpany, all principals,
even down to the six chorus girls,
who were we suspect, however, da a
matter of fact six fairiy competent
actresses essaying the roles of chorus
girls and doing it much better than
Gus Edwards ever achieved with a
stageful of broilers and spear car
riers.
Leona Stephens Clever.
"Iff fact, in that accomplishment is
where the entire performance wna so
delightful. The piece called for a
soubrottc who sang soubretto songs
but she impersonated a soubrette
much better than the average blon-
dined gambolcr before the footlights
could possibly be a soubrette. Leona
Stephens is a clever lady, and al
though she looked the part beyond
cavil she lent to it a sense of humor
and burlesque that was half hoyden,
half actress, but artiste all through.
Her songs with that incomparable cho
rus—of only six—behind her really
warmed tho first real audience of the
hew season to midwinter enthusiasm.
And (hat is a real achievement.
"While of the nine principals not
one but carried off honors sufficient
to satisfy even a well-developed pro
fessional temperament, Franklin Far-
num, a young man with all tho mati
nee physical characteristics which
have made fortunes for two others of
the same family name, brought a
lightnes sand deftnesc of touch, tp tho
part of the Iibretist who finally
shoved his ankle into the clasp of the
-ball and chain’ that was so far above
what wo usually get this far from
Broadway in the way of young men
who must sing and be sentimental in
love scenes and pleasing in comedy
lines that to hi minuet go really the
major honors. The outstanding clev
erness of the plot.and the real dra
matic situation, developed at the,end
of the second act, were preserved to
the occasional delicacy Intended by the
producers only by the exertion of real
stage presence and dramatic sense.
This voung man has a future in light
comedy itself without the distinct aid
rendered last night by the lyrical bol
stering.
Real Soprano Voice.
-Edna Munsey brought a real so
prano voice, beauty and better than
the average drawing room drAniatic
ability achieved by prima donnas, to
.he part of the young woman com
poser who consented to ‘collaborate’
i purely platonic plane with the am
bitious and to start tyith somewhat
inhuman librettist The other three
women, Elsie Baird, Regina Richards
and Genevieve Houghton, the' three
■vives, gave just the right Interpreta-
ion roles with distinct comedy possi
bilities, espccitlly the latter as the
•pouse of the tall and delicious Scotch-
nan. This girl, for she Beetped no
nore than that, was so true to the
go-between, tell it in.confidante and
nnocent type of young matron, that
ihe was startlingly and uncannily fa
miliar on more than one occasiop.
"Tom Burton, the Scotch painter,
while enjoying the distinction of. pos
sessing a teal Scotch burr to his
tongue without, rolling his R’s into
wooly triils and without saying once
‘I dlnna ken,’ brought Scotch comedy
on to a much higher plane than the
few comedians of tho sort given to
the American stage. In fact, he typi
fied the whole company in that all of
them could bo funny In a drawing room
setting without burlesqueing the good
taste of the furnishings. The same
obtained with Frank Coombs and) Rus
sell Lennon, the other two husbands
who found "the only girl in the world,”
and learned that there were other con
solations than matrimony within the
spare of six short weeks, or long 1 ones
as the case msy be. Likewise Alfred
Fisher brought something -nedr in
valets.
"'The Only Girl’ is a departure,
but one so welcome from the stereo
typed hirlygirly, facial contorting
comedians and tame old kind of Songs
thst it made one hope that aft^r their
fashion all New York producers would
fail in line and emulate.
"'The Only Girl’ is a compliment
to the intelligence, qot a tax on its
tolerance.”
SEABOARD AIR LINE
South Bound.
No. 11 Departs 5:35 a. m.
No. 17 Departs 7:10 a.m.
No. 6 Departs 3:46 p. m.
No. 29 Departs 6:17 p. m.
North Bound. j
No. SO Arrives , .10:40 a. m.
No. 6 Arrives 6:17 p. m.
No. 18 Arrives.... 7:45 P.m.
No. 12 Arrives 11:42 p. m.
(Eastern Time),
Train No. 60 leaves at 8:50 o. m.
Train No. 62 leaves at 3:55 p. m.
Train No. 66 leaves 4:25 p. m.
(Sunday only).
Train No. 54 leaves at 9:05 a. m,
(daily except Sunday.)
Train No. 61 arrives at 1:20 p. m.
Train No.\53 nrrivos nt 0:30 p. m.
Train No. 55 arrives at 8 a. m-, (ex
cept Sunday.) j
Ha, ha!” laughed Old Sol. “Those
ves are wise, but not wise enough
C. of Ga. Ry;
Central Time.
TRAINS DEPART.
For Macon 6:45a.m
For Macon 4:16p.m
TRAINS ARRIVE.
From Macon .....’. 11:69a.m
From Macon 9:10p.m
Connections made at Madison with
Georgia Railroad, at Appalachee with
Greene County Railroad for Monro*
and at Macon for all point* south.
For laformation: Phone 040 or 15.
B. R. BLOODWORTH,
Commercial Agent
SOUTHERN RAW CO.
“ATHENS BRANCH”
Trains Depart
AJJ Points (Dally) ....3:20a.m.
AH Points (Daily) 1:00 n. m.
All Points (Sun. Only)....3:1Vp.m.
All Point* (Daily ex. Sun.) 3:30 p.m.
Train* Arrive
All Points (Daily) 12:40 p.
All Points (Daily) 6:50 p.m.
All Point# (Daily ex. San.) 9:45 a. m.
For Information telephone
PAUL PINKERTON, Com. Agt.
Phone 81.
E. SHELTON, Ticket Agent
Phone 1024.
By Its Windows
Shall It Be Known
TJcSSra’*