Newspaper Page Text
-r < . 1 • '• ?
- -
-
TUESDAY, MAY 1. /
ATHENS HERALD READERS ARE SUBSTANTIAL CUSTOMERS FOR ATHENS HERALD ADVERTISERS.
Strai
tid Theatre
Super Production Wednesday Strand Theatre ]
Cl
■
>
a
KIMBALL YOUNG
“T
HE 1
| |to^J - - j- - - ■ <
PRICE SHE PAID”;
A 'V
AD M 1
V-l 1, • ••;. •• ; • a f,'? 1
SSION 5 AND 15 CENTS ^ j
South Carolina Woman Tells
How Jacksons’ Cordial Cured
Her After She Suffered For
Years—Was Unable to Raise
a Hand—Now Well.
“Three years ago I was unable to
walk. I had to stay in bed all of the
time and whenever I went out I was
carried In a.chair,” says Mrs. J. C.
Phillips, of Clinton, S. C. “Today 1
nm a well womtgt and ca’n wulk bet
ter than I ever could in my life, and
1 give Dr. Jackson’s Cordial credit
for it all.” . i
“For years I suffered from chronic
rheumatism and nothing seemed to
help^tte. My hustand had doctor
after, doctorjid I took all kinds ot
medicine, but all in vain. One day
he bought a! bottle of Jackson’s Cor
dial from the Lydia Mill Stpre and I
began taking lb I began to im
prove immediately and today I am
“J do all of my housework where
before I was hardly obis to raise my
arm. My neighbors say that I was
cured by a miracle. I thank Cod for
Dr. Jackson’s Cordial and I want all
of my friends to know what it did for
me."
Mrs. Phillips is but one among
the thousands who have found per
manent cure by using this famous
medicine. It cannot be equaled in
tUe treatment of indigestion, consti-
S ation, dysentery, diarrhoea, sick
eadache, biliousness, fever, and all
forms of stomach, liver, kidney, and
blood troubles.
For sale by all druggists in Athens
and elsewhere.
Georgia-Mercer baseball game
in detail Colonial, Wednesday,
25c.
Stick a tomato vine in the ground
and give it any kind of a chance, says
Dr. Soule, and it will produce fifty
cents worth of food. It Is not exactly
a problem in higher mathematic to
figure how many plants would be
worth a bale of cotton.—Macon
News.
PERSONAL
MENTION
Mr. W. D. Whitman, of Statham, Is
a visitor to the city on business.
Mr. R. H. Norrell, of Winder, is
among the traveling men ip the city.
■Mr. M. Shropshire, of Summerville,
is in the’ city for a few days, i.'
Mr. W. A. Carlisle, of Gainesville,
is a visitor to the city today. '
Mr. S. H. Hall, of Marietta, is
among the visitors to the city today.
Mrs. J. H. Watson leaves this af
ternoon for Atlanta to. spend several
days with her daughter, Mrs. C. N.
Dennis.
The following Atlantans are regis
tered at the Georgian today: Messrs.
J. S. Webb, H.‘ G. McMillan, C. M.
Hobson. R. B. Barnett, R. W. Adams,
A. D." Kiser, E. B. Rockmore, H„ J.
Seegers, H. M. Reese, J. W. Hughes,'
R. H. Carswell and J. W, Robinson.
EYES OF .WORLD TURN
ON STRIKE-MENACED
L
(Continued from page 1.)
MARRIAGE
, LICENSES
Lovely White Skin!
Strain lemon Juice well before
mixing and maaaage face,
neck,' arms, hand*.
>11 means,- girls, P, r «P“ e , a
lotion .to keep your skin flexl-
young looking. You will soon
that true, loveliness does not
;he powedry-look or w »** n
sues* of-some hot-house flow-
is typified by the velvety
a of your skin, your peach-
tomplexion and rosy-white
le cost 'Uf a small Jar of ordi-
>ld cream one can prepare a
arterpfnt of the most won-
lemon akin softener and
xion beautlfler, by squeezing
ce of two freah lemons into a
containing three ounces of of-
white. Care should be taken
In the Juice throbgh a fine
a no lemon pulp th f *"
itlon will keep fresh *»
i Every woman knows - that
juice is used to bleach and re
ach blemishes ss freckles, **L
s and tan, and Is the Ideal
iftener, amoothener and beau-
try itl Get three ounce* of
1 white at anv phanwy «>d
mons from the groc'r and
no a auarter pint of this
lanfiSS'wS
.aaSSSIa
e roses and hidden bMOtyJrt
km. ' It is simply is"
othen rough, red hands.
WHITE
Mr. Samuel William Pinion, to
Miss Ethel May Burk, April 6.
Rev. M. G. Watkins to Mrs. Dor
cas Fox, April 8.
Mr. H. H. Fleming to Miss M.
H ulme, April 9.
'.Mr. Robert A. Godfrce to Miss
Mary Elisabeth Hardeman, April 10.
Mr. Wayland H. Orren to Miss
Ruth Bradberry, April 9.
Mr. Marion O’Farrell to Mias Rosa
lie Booth, April 12.
Mr. Clifford Williams to Miss Elis
abeth Von der Lieth, Aprfl 11.
Mr. Leo Barnett to Misa Rhodia
Eberhart, April 12.
Mr. J. W. Griswald to Mias Drew
Willie Crosby, April 18.
COLORED
6am Johnson to Estelta Moore,
April 8.
C. Cradie to Stella Johnson, April 8.
Louis Collins to Lula Lumpkin,
April 11.
Will Mullens to ancy Tate, April
18.
Ed Horton to Mary Lou Adams,
April 15.
Jim Hale to Nellie Clarke, April 23.
J. C. Downer to Cora Cunningham,
April 28. i
GIFFORD PINCHOT
TALKS TO FARMERS
(By United Press.)
Atlanta, Ga., May 1.—Gifford Pin-
chot, president of the National Con
servation Association and other food
conservation expert* addressed a
meeting of the Georgia.Farmers’ Un
ion at the Capitol today, called for
added impetus for the great drive for
food crops in the south. Later in the
afternoon the meeting went into ex-^
ecutive session.
PRAISE FOR COLONEL
(By United Press.)
London, May 1.—“Colonel Roose
velt has the good wishes of every
lover of truth, honesty and sincerity
in his effort to raise troops for serv
ice in France,’’ declared H. J. Ten
nant, former under secretary of war*
“It will be a glorious spectacle to
see the representatives of our great
democracies fighting side by side in
such a cause as this."
HERALD WANT ADR
TOO LATE FOB CLASSIFICATION.
SEWING
CARRY your sewing to Mr*, M. L.
Doolittle, 185 State street m8c
Mimo WAIT ADS
’25e.
positions for a moment but they
were immediately driven out, with
losses.
Taking of Adeux by the Cana
dians was a hotter piece of work
than the storming of Vimy Ridge—
while it lasted—according to veter
ans of the fighting with whom I
talked today.
There was hand-to-hand fighting
in the street* and byways of the
town for two hours—a desperate
bayonet to bayonet struggle in which
the Canadians opposed the 111th
German division.
The bodies held the so-called Ar-
leux "switch trenches" and the town
supported by many machine guns.
The very firit rush of the Cana
dians, byi-ita Irrisistable force swept
the Germans back, despite their rain
of maohine • gun fire. The enemy
scattered into^Arleux by two roads.
One ofUVtse was prolonged into the
main street of tne’ village. It was
here that the hardest fighting cen
tered. All along the streets in the
gutters, on the narrow pavements, in
and out of tKe doors of houses and
shops it was a give and take strug
gle of man to man.
German machine guns and German
snipers planted with ingenuity on
both sides in the houses and roofs
and impeded the advance until the
Canadians potted them.
Then with bayonets and revolver
butts the Maple Lesfers smashed
the Prussians and drove them from
the town. A good many prisoners
wer liter rounded up in houses and
side street*.
ONE HUNDRED SHELLS A
MINUTE FIRED BY FRENCH
(By Henry Wood, United Press Staff
Correspondent.)
With French Armies in the Field,
May L—One hundred sheila a min
ute is the violent maximum of artil-
lary fire with which the French on
Monday attacked along a front of
eight mile* around Moronvillers.
The concentrated blaxe was the
precursory move in the French ad'
vsnee over the western summits -of
the shoulder of the Moronvillera
crest- It wae one of “he most for
midable artillery actions in the his
tory of the entire war to date.
I saw this hundred-shell*-*-mln-
ute bombardment contmue through
out the day. Th«*Ve»sIe Valley was
a seething furnace of bursting pro
jectiles, smoke and dust.
INTENSE CANONADING IS
RESUMED ON RIGA FRONT
Petrograd, May 1.—"Extenaive op
erations may be expected shortly
was the significant phrase in a semi-
qfllciai statement today describing a
sudden resumption of intense cannon
ading on the Riga front.
“The fire covered 1 the region froirj
Riga to Ikakul and was particularly
interne in the region of Kalncem.
• The "extensive operations” may
have something t* do with reports of
• week ago that a German battle
fleet, convoying transports was in the
Baltic presumably destined tor use
in a rear attack against the Russian
Riga line.
BERLIN SAYS GERMAN TROOPS
ACHIEVE IMPORTANT VICTORY
Berlin (Via London, May 1-—Ger-
man troops achieved an important
victory over the French on the
heights of Naurov and Moronvfflen,
winning bade and holding all those
positions, today’s official statement
declared.
HALF OF ALL MUNITIONS
WORKERS IN RHINE SraiKE
London, May L—Half of all the
munitions worker* in the Rhine prov
ince of Germany Joined the general
■trike todag, according to a special
agency diipeteh received hep today
from Th* Hague.
As tKe "Mongolia Looked "When
She Sailed Down the Hudson
The first blow ^gainst Germany
has been struck by n mere merchant
steamship. The Mongolia of the At
lantic Transport line with n gun
crew from the American navy on
board has reported tin sinking of a
German submarine In British waters.
One shot from her stem gun did the
work. This is what Captain Rice,
master of . the vessel, had to say
about it: : ,i.
“We wer going at toll speed ahead,
and two minutes after we firet sight
ed the U-boat it emerged - again
a&out 1,900 yards.off. Its .(Mention
probably had been to catch us broad
side .on, but when It appeared we
had the stem gun trained full on it.
■ “The lieutenant gave the commend
and the big gun boomed. We eaw
the periscope shnttcrcd by the shell
and the submarine disappeared.”
’ baseball game
Wednesday,
Many Applications Are Made
For Officers’ Training Gamp
More Than Fifty Applicants in
One Day to Captain Walter O.
Boswell—Twenty-Three Were
Passed For Admittance to the
Training Camp—Many Ath
ens Boys Go to Atlanta to
Make Application on Monday.
Many Are Turned Down.
As soon a* the members of tha se
nior class of the University of Geor
gia learned that all of the men in
good standing would be given their
diplomas, in case they succeeded ia
making the officers training camp,
there was a rush tor the office of
Captain Walter Boswell, who is the
examining officer for the sixth ris-
trict of this division.
It was stated late yesterday after
noon that there had been between
fifty and seventy-five of the students
of the university to apply to Captain
Boswell, but that only twenty-three
of the applicants were able to stand
his examination. There were many
of the men who applied to Captain
Boswell who have never drilled with a
riflef and who have neve rbcen in a
military organisation of any kind who
were unable to stand the examination.
There were also many who had neer
drilled in any way who succeeded In
passing the examination. ,
It to expected that there will be a
large number to apply to Captain Bat-
well today for admittance to the
training school and it to thought that
there will be at least as many more
to be admitted today as there were
yesterday. The student! seem anx
ious to go to Atlanta and try for the
examination whether they are accept
ed at the end of the training period
or not. jl
ATHENS BOYS APPLY
There were a great many of th*
young men of the city to go over to
Atlanta Monday for the purpose of
making application in that city tor
admittance to the training camp, but
tboao who returned to the city last
light did not know whatbar there
would ba any of these young men sc-
cepted or not*
The young men-tit the city are
showing a great deal’of interest in
the mattogifr th* training camp and
it to thought that there, will be large
numbers of them to leave for Atlanta
during the present week to try and
be admitted.
THOSE FROM UNIVERSITY
Following is a complete list of
those who wer epassed by Captain
Boswell for admittance to the camp
yesterday:
R. P. Bassett, Fort Valley; G. H.
Cochran, Bowman; E, M. Cohen, Ath
ens; J. S. Coleman, fiiuguSta; W. A.
Cunningham, Athens; Roland Ellis,
Jr., Macon; A, R. Fawcett, Savannah;
H. B. Hodgson, Athens; W, A. Hodg
son, Athens; T. E. Hollingsworth,
Athens; J. Louis Morrison Atlanta;
Howard H, McCall, Atlanta; Glenn
B. Hyman, Fitzgerald; S. P. Sanford,
Athens; G. M. Scheer, Atlanta; T. A.
Thrash, Greenville; H. M. Willett, At
lanta, all of the University of Geor
gia, and E. Hammond Johnson, John
R. Northcutt and J. S. Myers, Athens;
L. L. Wall, Elbcrton.
one brUUght here, although two or
three pieces short, is much better.
Crowds gather on the streets during
the concerts and many selections
are played-
Ku Klux Meet Tonight
Mildred Rutherford Olan, No. 5,
■will hold a meeting at 8 o’clock' thia
evening in the 'Pythian hall. Inter
esting matters will come before tb*
order.
Soldier Saved Milady's Hat.
Seme young Athens dam* has one
bright spot at least in the mobiliza
tion of the soldiers of Uncle Sam. A
unit of them having saved for her
the choice millinery creation of the
spring's designs. Saturday morning
Michael's was looking tor on express
shipment of exclusive millinery from
New York, one of the boxes to con
tain the above mentioned hat, but
the hat failed to show up until Mon
day morning's express came around
and—
There was the hat In n separate
box just as it had left tha big
wholeseto house . in New, York, ex
cept on thaoutsid* was written th*
following: ‘‘Picked up by soldiers of
Company E, Savannah; Ga„ Saturday
morning."
The box had evidently blown from
the expreas ear and landad close to
the boys of Company K doing guard
duty near Savannah and they deliv
ered it back to an express agent
and it came into Athena and to
Michael’s and the young lady just a
day late.
STEAMER BALLARAT
SUNK BY SUBMARINE
(By Associated Pres*.)
London, May 1.—A submarine re
cently sank tha steamer Ballarat,
carrying troops from Australia 'to
England. All aboard wer* rescued.
wife’s Presentiment
SAVED CAPTAIN’S LIFE
(By United Pres*.)
New York, May 1.—A presenti
ment of evil prevented Captain Wil-.
Uam McKay from sailing in com-
msad of the American steamer
Vacuum on Its last voyage, ended by
a German torpado, according to offi
cials of th* Shipping commission- -
ex's office today.
His wife, they said, Avas bo
strongly impressed with the Idea
that she would nevsr see him again
If he went tbit at the last minute
he withdrew from command, and
Captain Harris took the vessel. Har
ris to among the mlsalng.
SINKING OF VACUUM
OFFICIALLY REPORTED
(By United Frees.)
Washington, D. - C., Mey 1,—The
government-got ft* first official news
of the sinking of the American steam
er Vacuum today In n cablegram to
th* >stat*. department.
Tho official statement follows:
"A telegram to the department >f
state from the American consul gen
eral, lit London aayi that the Ameri
can vessel Vacuum was destroyed by
a submarine. The mate nnd seven
teen of th* craw, including threegtin-
nsrs, were rescued and landed. These
wer* In on* boat. . Other boat* held
th* matter naval Uautenant and the
remainder cf the crew, and art (till
misting."
USE HERALD
WANT ADS
PRINCE AVENUE HOME
1136 PRINCE AVENUE—Nice six-room home on large
shaded, east front lot, is offered for aale on easy terms,
and the price is right. » i
If interested in owning a home on Prince avenue we advise ■
you to ask for full inforpuition about this property. Phono or
see
ERWIN & COMPANY
Photo 345
Rambles About
Athens Town
Grand Commandry Meet.
The annual meeting of the Grand
Commandry is being held in Thomas-
ville this week and there are many
of the Athens members who will at
tend. Those who'left this morning
to attend the meeting from thi* city
were: Messrs. B. F. Hardeman, E. B.
Cohen, H. L. Stewart and Dr. M. T.
Summerlin. They left to represent
the Godfrey de Bouillon Commandry
in this city.
Engineers Are Back.
The members of the engineering
clpsa of the University of Georgia,
who have been at work making a
map tor the city of Milledgeville,
have returned to the city. The claia
was in charge of Colonel Griggs and
their work was as good as has ever
been done by the engineering depart
ment About twenty of the member*
of the class will return to Milledge
ville next week headed by Professor
C. N. Strahan to complete th* map.
Concert Famished by Bind.
The Greenwood Show* bend has
been furnishing the people of Ath
ens with two concerts daily and Jt to
one here jlbja week although two or
to the [city tor many month*. The
bend last year was good, but the
$7.80 SAVANNAH $7.80
“BY THE SEA”
Georgia Sunday School Association
Tickets on sale May 7th, 8th and 9th; final limit
May 13th.
Through coaches, without change, via Central of
Georgia Railway will leave Athens 7<40 a. m. (East
ern time), May 7th.
Sleeping cars on night trains. Parlor cars on day
trains, between Macon and Savannah.
Of
THE RIGHT WAY