Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, DEC. 15 ,
f 1 BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES t BY MARTIN
WOTRE YOU mrw /?== » OUST CAmY 6ET CNER \V • t'buy VJ£LL-H£ ml OOtSUT owe-am HANiE ill fcAY-DO too mu ATTA6\Ru’. thats
tryikj’ to pete'! WELL* WCTT HOW ANYONE COULD BE > OU*>' SORE*. ANOTHER.
think about ABOUT 'IM ? SO DUMB AS TO COfAt \ TWNK A* KUCH OF THAT WAY MAKE
SILLY ? If L HOKE JUS* BEFORE CHRIST •> c ’lM IF HE OCESmT- --(7^ ABOUT l OWA HY UST
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GUY HELLO, ftM s
over There has &ee>\ 61VIM* EVERY- EVER HEAR AMY O'TH’ Nope! AH- RIGHT OVER HERE. :»TM i / PULL, SALES UP
6AMPLIM' IU TH* STORE EVERYTH seu_ IMS TH/MG FT-I'LL ELSE GIVE A SEVERAL BAHAMAS'? JOKES ABOUT THEM a OM£ l •f till this
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS BY BLOSSER
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A 7WECELL STUFF FOR. UMDV 'TO AlAiT LOCF-- JOST Y
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Saint and Sinner I
1
______
Belore she left for the office with
Bob that Friday morning. Cherry
made no verbal apology to Faith
for her atrocious behavior of the
night before, but she kised her
ter good bye with unaccustomed
. warmth her arms clinging tightly to
her for a moment, and when Faith
went to Cherry’s room to bathe and
dress the baby she again found that
task already performed.
Cherry had not slept particularly
well upon her sins. Faith wondered
tenderly and pityingly wiiat strange
battle between the good and evil in
her unaccountable little sister’s
nature had been waged In that pret
ty bedroom during the long hours
after Cherry had fled from the lly
ing room the night before,
late in the eyes of the two men
whose devotion to herself she had
high-handedly taken for granted.
j All that was good and unselfish
I —however small that might be—
bad been instantly called to the sur
face in Cherry’s volatile nature by
that naive confession of Rhoda’s
For today, at- least. Cherry woul8
remain true to the vow she had vis
ibly registered not to try.to fan into
a new flame the attraction
Nils had felt for her upon sight, and
which she believed had almost help
ltssly been quenched by her badly
staged little melodrama to excite"his
jealousy and to call his chivalry tc
her defense, Poor little rudderlest
Cherry,
A few minutes filter, after Hope
j h ac j n0 right to cheat Bob of an eve- |
j nir.g of bridge, of which he was in- :
| crdiriately fond, and that Cherry i
\ might resent having her generosity !
| thrown back upon herself: In her ;
! present mood, Cherry would get a !
sort of morbid pleasure cut of the t
staying chastely at home and play-;
ing the devoted mother. And re
pentance in solitude was undeniably
gcod for her. ;
! At evelen o’clock the telephone,
rang and Ithoda answered it. A
few minutes later she appeared at
the doer of the sun parlor, where!
j Faith w'as playing with Hope, her | 1
! China- blue eyes shining with joy.
j “Nils wants to know If I can have
(the evening out With him. I told
I him you might want me to take
1 care of the baby, because you and i
; Mr. Hathaway are going to a bridge
party.” ,
j “Of course you may go, Rhoda,”
Faith told her. “Tell him that Cher
ry is going to take care of the baby
11 nis evening hefself. Be sure to tell
i him that, Rhpda,”
i The two girls smiled at each oth- ;
er a slow, deep smile of under ^
standing, and then Rhoda sped to
,the telephone.
NEXT:—A happy evening for Beh
and Faith, but not for Cherry.
! Sunny Side News
■ i
I Mrs. R. H. Dorsey entertained a
■ few of her friends with a spend-the
,clay party last Thursday. Those in-
vited were Mrs. Lafe Wheat, Mrs.
Walter Elder, Mrs. Flem Dupree and
and Mrs. Jessie Manley.
Mrs. Henry Weems friends will be \
sorry to hear of her Illness at her j
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Elder have re- J
turned to their home here, after j
spending sometime in Atlanta on bu-1
siness.
Mrs. Late Wheat, Mrs. Jpssie Man- j
ley and Mrs. Charles Griflln spent
Tuesday shopping In Atlanta.
Roy Bell, of Atlanta visited his
mother Mrs. John Bell, here Sunday,
DeLand, Mr. and Fla., Mrs. spent Thomas several Barfield days last of j j
week here, with their mother, Mrs. I
O. Barfield.' ■
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Dunree and son |
Wllllam v and Hardeson Dorsey spent!
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. W.
Strickland, hear McDonough,
Mr.\and Mrs. Guss Gay, who have)
been making their home in Daw-son
are spending a while with their fa-1
ther, To mGay.
■
!had been given her nine o'clock bot
I tie and was drowsing off to sleep,
Faith went to her own room and
{found another evidence of Cherry’s
1 |g repentcnce—the three goreous pale
reer ) orchids which Nils had
! brought her the night before. The
1 jdellcate blossoms thrust Into
were a
| ^lim yellow vase, beneath scrawl which was
; a note in Cherry's
“Faith darling: Wear these to Mrs.
j Harrison’s bridge party tonight. Of
iccipe. bad I’ll Cherry.” stay home with Hope, j
j Your ,
| Faith had forgotten about the |
Harrisons' bridge party, an invitation
which she and Bob had accepted
nearly a week before. Frownlngly ;
.she wondered if it were too late |
| for her to beg off, for she felt that j
Cherry in a chastened, repentant
tnood might be hungering for a longi
confidential talk with her. but as j
J 1 she mused, her tea-misted her eyes that upon! she i
the flow-ers, it came to
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
—
HH+nMih
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* , V ■M
' ■ s
NEW BUS SCHEDULE
(Effective December 15th, 1927)
i
We wish to announce that we have re-arrangcd our schedule to be of
greater benefit and service to you. The schedule has been arranged
to be more uniform as to ^erve you better.
We sincerely hope that you will find them more convenient and
suitable to your needs.
NEW SCHEDULE:
LEAVE GRIFFIN LEAVE GRIFFIN
Northbound Southbound
8:55 am.; 11:25 am.; 1:10 pm.’* ' 9:35 am.; 10:50 am1:50 pm.;
2:55 pm.; 4:10 pm.! 5:55 pm.; 3:35 pm.; 4:50 pmd 6:35 pm.;
and 7:55 pm. and 7:50 pm.
4 COACH ABOUT EVERY
NOW YOU MAY GET A DIXIE SAFETY
TWO HOURS. DIXIE COACHES ARE CLEAN, HEATED, DELUXE
PARLOR MOTOR COACH SERVICE. RESPONSIBLE, DEPENDABLE
DIXIE SAFETY COACH LINES, Inc.
Successorn to Peach Belt Lines
Your patronage will show your desire for better service and reliable
„ Bus system!
* “Vi
.
Kz
■MMMtoaw
THE BOOK OF KNOWLE
Synopsis by Braucber
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Here is a picture of the loom on which the wool ■ <
threads are woven into cloth. The warp, or length
wise thread, is crossed with the weft, the crosswise
thread, in this wonderful machine. This loom pro
duces cloth at a rate of speed that would astonish the
primitive weavers of India and Turkey.
•y NM Thrwifti Scti.l F.rwlgtiow »« ». M TM M CkT***
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The cloth is then
scoured or washed and
then goes through in a
* t fulling i» it process saturated -
which is
with water containing
fuller’s earth.
S. wz !■ T|| ;rjpgr^ig t a. ‘'I I ^
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Then a shearing machine cuts the nap avenly all
I the cloth, much a» a man shaves himsetf with a
over
safety razor. After being pressed glaze, to remove the clotn creases is
and steamed to take away the
stretched in a drying room. Finally it is folded through
a machine, and now is ready for the shop.
(Next: The Wonder.of Silk)
.3 Yr ” um. 31in -‘ #5;
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it as
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Next It is rofred and
dried in different ma
chines and ti reused,’’
which means having a
nap put on the cloth a
rubbing it with tease
heads.