Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY. MAY 3.
ATHEKd HERALD READERS ARE SUBSTANTIAE CUSTOMERS FOR ATHENS HERALD ADVERTISERS.
Herald Market Place
II ^ daily department for the use of buyer and seller, 'll
|| owner and renter,{employer and employee.
Phone yoor Wento. Your, credit | a
good if jon/ent a phono.
Rates: One cent per word per d£;
three days, two cents; seren days,
four cents.
FOR SALE!—Real Estate.
$S50t—WILL BUY a 4-room negro
house on Cherry street on lot
19x227, that rents for $7.00 per
month. The lot fronts on Cohen
street and there is room enough for
another house to be built.
ERWIN & COMPANY.
Phone 345. pd s
FOR SALE—Farms®-
WE ARE OFFERING for a q
sale, 136-acre farm in Jackson
county on good road 10 miles from
Athens. This form is rented for 7
halos of middling cotton. Price,
$29.26 per acre; terms, $1,000 cash,
balance one fo five years. H. O.
Epting & Co., Hancock Bldg., Broad
St, Athens, Gs. pds
FOR SALE—Hogs.
FOR SALE—Three or four Duroc
Jersey hogs, 3 sows weight about
200, in farrow, one boar good condi
tion. weigh 300. All registered, not
related. T. W. Powell. m3c
FOR SALE—Refrigerator.
FOR SALE—Practically new refrige
rator. Capacity about 100 pounds.
A bargain worth while. Address E.
M. W., care The Herald. m3p
FOR RENT—Apartments.
FOR RENT—April 1st, two S-nom
apartments in Herald building.
Rooms are partially furnished. Ap-
ply at Herald Business Office. m2Q»
FOR RENT—Storage Room.
NEW AUTO SERVICE
Doings of the Duffs
By Allman
WHEN IN NEED of an auto, day or
night, call 361, Athens HpteL Rates
reasdhable. Careful driver. »17c
C. J. KENNEY
JUST RECEIVED—Full hogshead
Cuba molasses, 60c per gallon. C.
J. Kenney, Prince avefiue, phone 1016.
Jul6c
EXPERT REPAIRII^t
CHAFIN BROS. GARAGE, open all
night. The largest^ and , cleanest
place in Athens for storing and re
pairing. The best of gasoline, oils
and greases. pds
MARTIN BROTHERS
FORD, one man. Mohair top, Jlffey
side curtains at factory prices put
on. See us and get out of the rain and
weather. Martin Bros., Shoe Repair
ing. tf.
PEARL WHITE SHORTENING
FOR SALE—Athens Product, Pearl
White Shortening, made fresh daily
in your own city. Your grocer has
GOLD'CROWN AND BRIDGE
V * WORK.
kOO to $5.00 a tooth according to con
dition and amount of work. Satis
faction guaranteed. Dr. H. B. Hay
wood, Athens Dental Pa-lors. Succes
sor to E. G. Griffin, 612-618
Mutual Bldg. . *
FOR RENT—Storage room in Herald
Bldg. Apply at Business Office. m7x
FOR RENT—Farm.
FOR RENT—A good one-horse farm
on shares. Located at Attica; ex
cellent community, within half mile
of good school; outhouses, good pas-
lure, etc. Address W. M. (Thornton,
R. F. D. 3, Jefferson, Ga., or phone
or inquire at Shackelford’s Store at
Attica. ‘ ■ s5p
FOR RENT—Rooms.
FOR RENT—Furnished room with
bath adjoining, two blocks from
Holman building. Business man pre
ferred. Call 1365. ml6e
FOR RENT—Two roorfti, furnished
or unfurnished. Close in, on car
line. References required. Address
"W,” 27414 Clayton street, city. m5c
PUBLIC PASTURE
READ Tills, get your line and drive
your cow to O. F. Martin’o pas
ture and save from $2 to $3 a month
on pasturage. Route No. 4, Athens,
Ga., Newton’s Bridge Road. m7p
C. of Ga.Ry
The. Right Way
' Central Tina.
_ TRAINS DEPART.
For Macon ##••••*••••••• 0:40 a ns
For Macon . 4:16 p. D
TRAINS ARRIVE.
From Macon 11:69 a. a
From Macon 9:10 p. m
Connections made at Madison wit]
Georgia Railroad, at Appalachee wifi
Green County Railroad for Monro*
and at Macon for all points south.
For Information: Phone 640 or U
B. R. BLOODWOHTH,
Commercial Agent
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Ive February 18, 1U7.
(Eeastern Time.) •
i BRING MASK
I DOWN TOO, WILL
Not) PMSASE, 9
-^Nelem:
A Practical Design.
2022—Ladies' Apron.
Checked or striped gingham is nice
for this model, but percale, sateen,
brililantine, lawn, drill and denim
arc also desirable. The pattern
cut in 4 sizes: Small, for 32 and 34
inches but measure; medium, for 36
and 38 inches bust measure; large,
for 40 and 42 inches bust measure,
and extra large, for 44 and 46 inches
bust nmasure. It requires for a me
dium size 4 3-8 yards of 36-inch ma
terial.
*A pattern of fhis illustration
.mailed to any address on receipt of
10 cents in silver or startfos
George Stallings' Braves ,
• May Rip Plans o f McGraw
City neM-»*,.,*i,Btzts
SEWING
CARRY your sewing to Mrs. M. L.
Doolittle," 185 State strait. m8c
BUSINESS CHANCES
property; new buildings. Guaranty
Inyestment and Loan Co. H. P. Law-
rence, Mgr., phone 716. , •
FOR RENT—Desirable atoR room,
25x40, in Herald building. Faces
I.umpkin street, in front of express
office. Apply at Herald Business Of
fice. m7x
LOST—Keys.
LOST—Ring of keys, on Prince ave
nue, between firemen’s hall and
Cobb street. Reward if returned to
Judge E. K. Lumpkin, Prince ave
nue. m4p
Effective Fel
Train No. 60 leaves at 8:30 a. m.
Train No. 62 leaves at 4 p. ml
Train No. 64 leaves at 4:20 p. m..
Sunday only.
Train No. 61 arrives at 12:30 p. m„
daily except Sunday.
Train No. 63 arrives at 9:40 p. m.
Train No. 65 arrivea at 12:40 p. m.,
Sunday only.
FOR EXCHANGE
HAVE a good mare that I would
like to exchdlge for a Ford rood-
ir or touring ear- Addresr X. Y.
care The Herald. a7x
SPRING CLEANING
WHILE YOU are ceaning up remem
ber old scraps of glass you have
stored in basement at your home,
packed away for years. Send to John
L. Arnold’s paint store—and he will
see what it measures up and allow
you a liberal profit for it. ml5c
HATRENEWRY
LADIES’ and gents’ Panamas a spe
cialty. Mail orders given prompt
attention. The Hat Renewry, 274*4
Clayton street. Athens, Ga. mSc
MISCELLANEOUS
WHEN YOU move, wW not move
right 7 We do jt right. Imrga
spring mpgon*. Wimams Bros., phone
148.
Gainesville Midland fly, Schedule
TIME TABLE NO 19.
January 23rd. 1916.
Train No. 2 leaves Athens 7:20 a. m
Train N$. 4 leaves Athens 2:20 p. m
Train No. 1 arrives Athena_ll:40 a. m
Train No. 4 arrives Athens 6:40 p. m
Nos. 2 and 4 connect at Belmonl
for Winder and Monroe and intense,
dlate points, and with tho Georgis
Railroad for all points and at Gaines
ville for Gainesvillo A Northwesterr
stations and with 8outbsrn Rsilwaj
lorth and south.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
South Bound.
No. 11 Depsrts 5:02 A.M.
No. 17 Depsrts .
No. 6 Departs .
No. 29 Departs .
North
No. 30 Departs 10:40 A.M.
No. 6 Departs 6:62 P.M.
No. 18 Departs 7:46 P.M.
No. 12 Departs 11:46 P.M.
7:10 A.M.
8:46 P.M.
6:18 P.M.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
ATHENS BRANCH.
Trains Depart.
Ail Point* (Daily) *:» a. m
AH Points (Daily) .. .. .. 1:00 p, m
Ail Points (Sun. Only) ... 8:15 p. m
All Potato (Daily ex. Sun.) 8:80 p. m
Trains Arm*.
Ail Potato (Daily) 13:« p. m
All Potato (Daily) ...... «=» P- ™
AD Potato (Daily ex. Sun.) 9.48 a. V
For information telephone
H. E. WILLIAMS, Commercial Aft
Phena *L
E. SHELTON, Ticket Aft,
Phone 1024.
A Simple and Pretty Design.
• 2011—Child's Dress, with Sleeve in
Either of Two Styles. ‘
Lawn, nainsook, batiste, dimity,
“allover” embroidery, caAmere,
nun’s veiling, challie, silk and alba
tross are good materials for this
style. Thp model in made with panel
sections in back and front and is
lengthened at' the aides by gathered
skirt portions. The sieve may be
short, with a turnback cuff, or fin
ished at wrist length with a band
cuff. The pattern is cut in 4 sizes:
2, 3, 4 and 5 years. It requires 2 1-4
yards qp 36-ineh material for
year size.
A pattern of - this illustration
mailed to any address on receipt of
10 cento to Mgr or stamps.
No.
Street aad No.
Size
City
With 100,000 people shouting en
thusiastic vivas as they marched
through the streets of Buenos Aires,
it doesn’t look aa if Argentina was
Laodictan any to hurt—Macon News.
(By H. C. Hamilton, United Press
Staff Correspondent.)
New York, May 8.—The zip, the
pep, the earnestness and the all
round dash included in the make-up
of the Boston Braves which carried
that team from the- depths of last
place to a wc rld's "’championship in
1914, stand a chance of tearing holes
in an otherwise well Jaid out plan of
one John McGraw tins year.
The Braves tre {different from
other baseball clubs. They are train*
ed that way by George Stallings, and
because they are different, fans are
bom ail over again in the enthusi
asm of baseball when they visit a
park where the Boston ruffians are
performing.
It is natural for a baseball player
to get out on the field, smite himself
with his hands, jam his paws to
gether and shout “Attaboy."
BA with the Braves'it's something
else. A shout from a member of
that baseball club is one step In the
George Stalling’s method. pf winning
a baseball game.
Ed.Konetchy is just a great, big
overgrown man who teamed to play
ball. . John Evers is a bundle of
nervoa, always fighting. Walter Ma-
ranville ia a little fellow jvith a mar
velous pair of hands *m a set of
nerves that won't quit Aghting. Red
Smith la just a ball player who has
learned to fight and fight hard for
every step of a baseball game. The
outfield, represents the same thing.
The Braves have been called a money
team. Sportsmanship, they say, is a
word that doesn’t thrive in the vicin
ity of Braves field. But watch the
turnstiles where the Braves play.
The crowd likes It. m
" To Watch the Braves In action't
the most -entertaining thing i
sport. The Braves arc not made U]
of high-class stars, every cog; per
feet. They are just plain, every day
ball players, some of them men who
couldn’t hold their places on any
other-team. , «
Stallings has been given a record
of hard words on the baseball field, a
heavy fist and a growl for every
player. But players never perform
for another manager like they do for
George Stallings. In the vernacular
of the streets, ya gotta hand it ta
George. S
Stallings is msking his bid fob
pennant honors this year In the fact
of the most trying opposition. Ho if
facing in the New York Giants a
powerful aggregation of baseball
players. But it will pay to turn back
over history’s pages and note that
John McGraw had been voted a pen:
nant in 1914 and that he had actually
reached the crest of the heap ana
was driving along, when the Braves
came along and wrecked his little
wagon in their mad dash from last
to first place.
egd other directorial touches, all of
which help the production.
hemu «nan
Address Pattern Dept*
The Athens Herald
A Practical Model: g
2013—'Ladies' Apron Dress. This
model may serve as a,house dress.
It is comfortable and easy to.dpvolop,
easy to wear and ealy.to launder.
PercaleT gingham, seersucker, crepe,
town and alpaca are gowT for its .06-
velcpoment. -
• Tho pattern is cut i*4 alst&'84,
38, 42 and 46 inches bust measure.
It requires 5 yards of 8*hx*'mater-
ial for a 34-inch sise.
A pattern of this illustration
mailed to any address on receipt, of
10 cento In silver or stamps.
Ha Sisa.fiMsartacv.
Nasos pwwwwws
Street and Ne.
City rvoreiaoso.w.1
THURSDAY.
Dotothy Dalton in
Strand—Doi
Dark Road." Extra comedy,
Love Fight.” .
Elite—Peggy Hyland and Marc
MacDermott, “Babette."
FRIDAY.
Strand—Vivian Martin and Jack
Tickford, “The Girl at Home." Extra,
Mrs. Vernon Castle, “Patria."
Elite—Cleo Madison, “Black Or-
chids." Extra, Bushntan and Bayne,
The Great Secret."
SATURDAY.
Strand—Charlie Chaplin, “The
Rink." Harold Lockwood and May
Allison, "Hidden Children. 1
Elite—Helen Holmes, “Tho, Rail
road Raiders.” Extra, Elko and Lone
some Luke comedies.
DOROTHY DALTON IN
"THE DARK ROAD"
The Strand offers one of the most
mpular stars on the screen today,
lorothy Dalton, one of the brightest
Triangle favorites—in one of the
of the year, “The
‘Dark Road."
It is a powerful picture—and it
will make the blood of the citizen
who loves his country boil. It* will
Hold the attention and will make a
tremendous, sensational impression—
and while it Is not intended as a
preachment it will be a powerful in
centive to patriotism—by showing in
lurid colors what a despicable thing
the opposite of patriotism is.
Miss Dalton plays a.most difficult
part as star—difficult because she
portrays a character that is all but
good; but she does it 'with over
whelming effect
“BABETTC," VITAGRAPH.
AT HE ELITE
TODAY
Htro’ffiwhst one impartial reviewer
„c - to bt at the
<9
of "Babette;’
today:
every live-reel picture, produced
were as good ss “Babette,” a Vita-
graph Blue Ribbon feature, there
would bo little need of ever asking
an exhibitor to si^ir a contract—he
would be only too glad to pay hi*
program rentals in advance. IK 4 Ba-
aeete,” with Marc MacDermotr and
Peggy Hyland in the featured roles,
is a thoroughly entertaining photo*
play and distinctly worth while. Ih
it been visualized a charming
tale th tais given added power to
please and satisfy the work and per*
sonality of the players and the
•r in which the film was pro
duct. F. Berkelv Smith, the au
thor, has given us a story that is
quite “different,” and Charles Brabin,
the director, has given Mr. Smith’s
story a production that accentuates
the story's good points and makes a
very few weak points plausible.
Set in the romantic province of
Normandy and the Quarticr Latin of
Paris, “^abette” is primarily a fpv
story; but not “mushily” so. It tells
of a youth who, by instinct a gentle
man, in soul an artist, is by choice
a clever thief; and who Is finally
moulded into the man he should al
ways hdte been by the yiure, whole
some love of the daughter of the
keeper of a “comic opera” jail. To
the main motif there have been
added stasonings of humor, pathos,
expatiated crime and other factors
that go into the maldbg of a photo
play whose appeal is not limited to
toy one particular class or type of
ludience.
Mr. MacDermott is 'Vth .masterful
and sympathetic. He never over
plays. Miss Hyland is beautifully
appealing, and her charm is cbm-
ptlling.' Templar Saxe ia a fitting
^choice for his part, as ia also Wil
liam Dunn. *" V
Deserving of especial mention an
the lighting! ta the interior scenes.
Theg are effective, as are also let-
1139—A Dstaty and Becoming Nor
llgee. Ladies -Kimono perfora
ted (or . Sack Length in
Straight or Portioned Outline.
This style of garment is easy to
develop, and very comfortable. Jt it
nice for cotton or silk crepe, for
cashmere, albatross, lawn, dimity,
crepe or batiste. The design shows a
waigt in Empire effect, finished with
a heading at its lower edge. The
•leeve it cut in one with the body of
the waist. Tho neck it finished low
in becoming “V" effect. The pattern
is cut in 3 sixes: Small, medium agd
’large, and will require 4)4 yards or
44-inch material for the full length
style, and 2 3-4 yards for sack length,
for a medium size.
A pattern of A tbit illustration
mailed to any address on receipt of
10 cento in silver or stamps.
I Popular Style.
Waist. With Cop-
1*28—A New aad
Ladles Skirt
vertlble Collar. - i *71
This chid and becoming model Is
excellent for madras, for lintp, cham-
brey, crepe, batiste pr lawn. The col
1st is coot and comfortable in low
neck stylo, and vary smart and fash
ionably closed high, with small turn
over effect The sleeve is finished
with a pretty cuff. The back extends
slightly over the front in yoke effect
The pattern la cut in 6 sizes: 34, 36,
38. 40, 42 and 44 inches bust mixt
ure. In site 86 the pattetn will re
quire 2 3-8 gards of 44-inch mater-
111, " t . ^ p
A pattern' oP this illustration
mailed to any address on receipt Of
10 cento ta silver or ptamps. ~: ‘ ’
. v ...e
City
• HoY’sThis?
We offer One Hundred Dinar*
Reward for any case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by Hall’a
Catarrh Cure. ’
_ F. J. CHENET 4 CO„ Toledo, Q.
W», the undersigned, have known P. J.
Cheney for th« lut If inn, aad better*
him perfectly honorable lu i
faiinctkms and financially ablo to carry
at any obligations mode or hie firm.
NATIONAL BANK OP COMMENCE.
Hell's Catarrh Cure 1* take
ettaf directly upon the blood AM HU-
tut m*. rOce n cento per Dome, bok
rtf. iwif?lS.ur vrm rm tsasiissm.
No. nsVeiw.. Sis#..
.....
51
;.;
Street end Ne.
CHy
•I'll'MNduq
...State..,..•£.
The Red Cross has protested
against German’s depravity in sink
ing hospital ships. Why not save the
stomp and bny n bullet?—Macon
News.
-
The Star Theater
Where colored people
can seethe best Pictures
5 AND 10c.
Fresh Cut Flowers Every Day
Crucedale Greenhouses
PHONES:
Day—1167. Night—14S5