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RACife TWO
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QOTMBY S MELTON ... Editor anjl Pebllafeef Manage*
T EMMET ......... Advertising Editor
18. BARRY ROGERS ........ Society
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OFFICIAL PAPER
* Otty ol GrifBn, Spalding, United States Court.
Northern District of Oeorgia.
, — (Dally Except Sunday)
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 1
aae tor publication of news credited to and It also and news j
not otherwise credited to this paper,
go all local news published therein are also reserved j
The Griffin Dally News will not be liable for any !
grror In any advertising beyond the cost of the ad - j
fertlsement. |
_ ______________ _
Published at 120 E. Solomon Street, GrifBn. Oa. i
Entered at Postofflce at Griffin, Ga., as second class
matter.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Dally By Carrier I
One year, in advance — tt.oo I
III months, in advance ISO
Three months, In advance l.»!
One month, In advance . .80
Dally By Mall
£ e year, In advance ... MOO
x months. In advance J.00 1.00
Three months, In advance
One month, in advance
Weekly Edlttea
Three months, In advance ..... »
One year. In advance ......... 11.00
Rtx months, in advance ....... JO
If sent wiv’iln 30-mile radius of Qrtflln. Beyond
One year 51.50. Six months, 75c. Three month*, 40e.
JULY 30, 1930
The Indwelling Word—Let the wwtd of
Christ dwell in your richly in all wisdom;
I teaching and admonishing another in
orje
psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, aing
ing with grace in your., hearty to the Lord.—
Col. 3; lb. y
Prayer:
‘O rated that nothing in my soul may
dwell* but Thy pure love alone. *9
THE ALTITUDE
Jr FLYER’S PERIL |
> The aviator who for altitude
goes up rec
ords runs risks thal never come to the lot
of the one who plugs along on lower, safer
levels.
Miss Ruth Alexander of SanDiego took
her airplane something like hve miles above
the ground. There, due to the exhaustion
of her oxygen supply she suddenly fainted.
Her airplane promptly obeyed the law of
gravity and started for the ground. I
As it happened. Miss Alexander recovered ! -
consciousness after a fall of orly a couple o f i
miles, and was able to guide her ship down t ( )
a safe landing. But the mere thought of her j
predicament is enough to give one a shiver.
It is hard to imagine any woise plight than
fainting in an airplane 25.000 feet off the
ground.
Invent In /ind ground Orinin"
QUOTATIONS
“It" will be long, long time before any one |
a j
suggests anything that will linger longer and
produce more laughs than did the time-hon -1
ored. softly oozing, snugly sticking custard!
pie.
—Mack Sennett.
—- “Invest In And Around Griffin’’ —
"What is the matter with the new pagan
is that he is not a pagan, he has not any of
the customs ( or consolations of a pagan."
—G. K. Chesterton, author.
“Invest In And Around Griffin”
"It has been proved that America does not
refuse to aid just because she maintains her
independent ( policy.
—Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, president
of the D. A. R.
—— "Invest In And Around Griffin" -
"Open up all the avenues you can for
your children, but leave them to follow them
up for themselves."
—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt.
"Invest In And Around Griffin" -
"Keep the imagination young." j
—Selma Lngerlof.
’’Invest In And Around Griffin"
"In my humble opinion prohibition can
never everyone is convert
ed to it.”
—Ida M. Tarbell.
"Invest In And Around Griffin” -
"The jjreatest dangers to liberty lurk in
insidious encroachment by mean of zeal, well
meaning but without understanding."
—Louis Brandies.
“Invest In And Around Griffin” ——
"Any man who goes to work to the tune
of a word battle with his wife is just three
times as liable to bungle his work as the
man who is mentally at peace.
—M. J. Flanigan, manager of a railway
safety bureau. *
—it “Inveot In And Around GrtflUt" ——
• i
"Thaology is like our skeletons. It is rath
at important but if is far more useful on the
inside than anywhere else."
—Bishop Irving P. Johnson.
'Taraat Is And Around GrU&s”
"If the nations want pcaca thay must not
enqpurage bonjfeaetia politicians- t)
•
—Lady Nancy Witcher Aster,
TWENTIETH AMENDMENT
PROPOSED
/ *
(
1
!
I
The latest Amendment to the Constitution
the United Staes, which grants equal sut
{rage rights to women, the same as men, does j
i lo t seem to satisfy one school teacher sister!
I know. She wants to get into politics, be
e toci to Congress, and put through another j
amendment. j
Tins woman is a teacher in the Ailanta !
Public School System; but her home is in
small country town west of Georgia, ncj . 'She -c
school |
goes there, every summer, as soon I
is out, to rest and recuperate. JTffiis summer,
however, she is. getting no rest, and the
mometer in her home Jjas been hovering, fo i
some days, between* 1 ’'! 00 and 104.
Here is an ract from one of her letters; •
If 1 had, e poetic talent, I think 1 'could
write *»dcs, lyrics, sonnets, and blank verse
%
01 "dishwashing, that is, if the daily grind
'tnspires poetry.
■‘We've had ihe house full of company
ever since 1 came hortie a month ago, one
relay after a nother; and I’ve certainly mast
ered' in the art o f cooking, dishwashing, and
serving.
"Today the house is still—one set has'
migrated, but Sunday there wi ill be* another
crowd; and if you ever hear of my running
for Congress you may know that the main
plank in my platform is
Amendment to the Constitution. 1 wish to
prohibit relatives from visiting their •
city ( po
country kin in the summer time.
There, nowl One woman has spoken. All
in favor o f the proposition, keep your seats.
If k a mere man. may suggest an
merit. I would suggest that only city sons
and' daughters and grandchildren visit the
home folks in the country during the
mer. that uncles, aunts, and first cousins wait
until the weather is cooler and peaches, grapes,
and watermelons are gone; that second and
third cousins run for an hour in mid-after
noon, some Sunday in October or November.
and third, fourth, fifth, and sixth consins stay
at home, where they belong, and wash their
own
Joking , 1 aside, .1 of r , 1 love to , ,
coarse we
our near and dear relatives, from town or
country, visit us whenever they can. winter
or summer ; but if the weather is very hot and
we have no help, they might turn in j
show ut'that they haven’t forgot how to wash
f
u,.,ues.
As "Old Man" D. T. Stone used to
to his country friends, after he moved to
Oxford. "When you come over \ alter River,
drnp in."
- "Invesr* Iti And Around GrifBn”
Philadelphia Dan O’Brien, king of
suggests that, the .city erect a 30,000-room
hotel for bums. What most of them ask
for, however, is not a room, but '-a nickle for
a cup of coffee.
- “Invest In And Arsund GrifBn’’ —
Drought stones from Memphis, Tenn., re
port a baby three months old who has never
seen a drop of rai*. He probably wouldn t
recognize it if he saw one, rfhyway.
— “Invest In And Around Griffin”
The convict who learned to play seven
different musical instruments while serving
sentence is probably the fellow who
sent to jail to keep out of a racket.
— "Invest In And Around Griffin” -
If you would be prepared -.for a deluge
of pithy comment on weather conditions
South America it is well to he advised that
it snowed in Chile the other day.
Invest In And Around Griffin"
Smokers consumed a billion more cigarets
this Ji^te than in the same month last year.
Shows you what a sKaky stock market can
do to your nerves. ,
“Invest In And Areund Griffin”
Queen Mary of F.nglnnd, a news item says,
smokes , two cigarets after t i lunchefln_*XSry i day.
But she * started too late, we fear, to avoid
that future shadow.
—— “Invest In And Around Griffin" ! ■
Jobless shoemarkers in San Salvador held j
a parade to protest the introduction of shoe
nwking machinery. What you might call
their last stand.
Invest In And Around Griffin" —
A prize of $25,000 is being offered for
the inventor of a new use for mercury. It
must hsve lost a lot of prestige in the re
cent heat spell.
"Invest la And Around Griffin" -
Floyd Dali, writer, suggests that booka be
thrown away aftax they are read. Apparently
he'a never had much experience with borrow
era.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
BASEBALL
STANDING
V.
Southern League.
STANDINGS.
CLUBS Won. Lost. Pi t !
Memphis . . 11 33 .6831
New Orleans 60 43 .583,
Birmingham .. .. 56 48 .5381
Atlanta . 1\ 52 .509 ]
Little Rock 53 56 .486 !
Chattanooga . 51 57 .572'
Nashville . 48 60 .444.
3C 74 .288 1
Mobile...... .
_ 1
YESTERDAY'!^ -RESULTS
Atlanta 19; Nashville 6. !
Blrmlngt)jM’ff 5; Chattanooga 9 j
< only ^ .(fames scheduled.)
—-—
TODAY'S GAMES
New Orleans at Atlanta (2). 1
Mobile at Birmingham (2). i
'
Little Rock at Memphis, i
Sally League
STANDINGS. i
CLUBS— Won. Lost. Pet.; „I
Macon n u .go:
Greenville . 17 12 - r c—j )Rt: 1
,, '
charlotte _ r
Asheville ... ._ 401 !
Columbia ° an M
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Greenville 3; Macon 2.
Charlotte 7; Columbia 4.
Asheville 2; Augusta 11 might
game.)
TODAY’S GAMES s
Asheville at Augusta
Charlotte at Columbia.
■ Greenville at Macon.
American League
STANDINGS.
CLUBS— Won. Lost. Pet
j Philadelphia . ... 67 34 .663
1 j Washington . ... 59 38 583
New York . . . . . 56 43 .566
; Cleveland . 52 49 .515
Detroit .. .... 47 55 .461
1 ... 41 56
. ... 40 60 .400
Boston .. .. .. . . 45 51
YESTERDAY’S RESULT?
Chicago 6; St. Louis 2.
Detroit 7; Cleveland 14.
New York 12: Philadelphia 3.
• Only games scheduled).
TODAY’S GAMES
! St. Louis at Chicago.
Detroit at Cleveland -
Philadelphia at Washington
New York at Boston.
National League
STANDINGS.
CLUBS- Won. I»OBt. Pet.
i Brooklyn .. .. . . . 58 38
Chicago .. .. . 58 41
York .. .. 53 44 ,54b
St. Louis .. ... 48 47 .505
Pittsburgh .. ... 46 49
Boston .. .. . . . 46 51 .’474
Cincinnati ... 44 52 .456
Philadelphia .. . .. 31 61 337 *
YESTERDAY”S RESULTS
; | Brooklyn 3; Boston 4.
Cincinnati 4; Chicago 3.
Philadelphia 5; New York II.
! St. Louis 5: Pittsburgh 6.
TODAY’S GAMES
Boston at New York.
! Brooklyn at Philadelphia.
St. Louis at Pittsburgh
j (Only games scheduled).
1 »» »
COACH EXCUSION
FARES MINIMUM RATE
$1.00
One fare plus 10 per
limit of 15 days.
One fare plus 25 per cent
; with limit of 30 days.
These tickets are on sa4e each
Friday, Saturday and Sunday dur
ing July and August and will ap
j ) of, ply to and practically including all points Washington south
i Cincinnati, Louisvtle, Evansville
: and St. Louis. Also all points In
Florida and to Savannah.
I Rate to Atlanta ... . $1.70; to „ Macon
%o f or round trip.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
A * A A
\
1*® C«»h 12 Mo.
Roadster “A" Spurt ..... $325
1926 Ford $100
••.....
“A” Pickup $300
Ford $45
Coupe .......
1929 Chevrolet $365
Roadster ____
l* 2 * “A" $375
Tudor .......
1929 Sedan ”’A" ....... $465
1927 Roadster Chevrolet .... $150
1926 Ford $100
Coupe .....
Sedan ^Mtac ..... $375
1925 Ford $95
Tudor ..
Randall & Blakely,
Inc.
EAST GRIFFIN
NEWS
ESTELLE GRUBBS
Correr poodent ,1
Fincher T
The friends of Lewis and
daughter. Miss Ruth-" Fincher are
sympathizing wipe - 'them in the
death of their wife and mother,
who FunergU'* died ^Friday at her home here. from
services were held
the Third Methodist church Satur
day afternoon. Interment was In
Oak Hill cemetery with Haisten
Brothers in charge.
Mrs. Dick Nichols Is still improv
ing at her home here after an 111
ness of several weeks.
Rev,, and Mrs. J. A. Langford and
children have returned home after
a visit to relatives near Gainesville
The Ladies Aid Society of the
Third Methodist church will held
their meeting Friday evening with
Mrs, Ethel Boyns.
Miss Ruth Simmons and Miss Es
telle Grubbs spent the week-end at
Meansville with Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Butler.
Lewis Castleberry, of Thomaston
spent the week-end here with rela
tlveS. ..
E W. Wilson is able ot be out
after an illness.
* Little Desmond Castleberry, of
Barnesville. is visiting relatives here.
Mrs. George Tvey and baby, of At-
Spit is a horrid word J
but it’s worse if on the
1
1 end of your cigar
j
i
!
;
:
4 m
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i i . One of actual pho-
1 I ■T ' many
■i & tograph j? of “spit-tip
V
M ping” cigar makers.
.
I The above picture was
; ; is 1- :♦ . ta ken on March 22,1930.
.
: >.• affidavit from the
:V. ;x : m ■ An
photographer is on. file,
• • . the war against Spitting is a showing man used that spit this in finish- work
I crusade of decency join it. ing the end of a cigar.
1
• • • :*
1 smoke CERTIFIED CREMO!
I
,
Over 7,500 cigar factories arc registered by the U. S. Government, Over 7,400
of these hand^roll cigars, producing 50 percent of the output. Every hand*
rolled cigar—made "spit-tippingCertified by American Cigar Co. or anyone else—is subject to the
possible danger of C remo is absolutely free fr om
spit-tipping — No Cremo is made by hand.
i
The choicest, tenderest leaves
that the crop affords are scien
tifically treated by methods
recommended by the United
States Department of Agri-
■Vi
<
Certified . *
p
THE GOOD 51CIGAB
ess THAT AMERICA NEEDED
S> 1930 American Cigar Co.
lanta. spent sometime here last
week with her pajehts, Mr. and Mrs.
W C Butler... ''
Mrs. D ard Woodruff, who has
been Striding some time in Ls
e has returned home -
'" Gary Butler, of Meansville. visit
ed here last week.
Mrs. J. A. Wilson and children, cl
Bartlesville, spent the week-end here
with relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wilson and
children spent Sunday near Milner
with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pugh.
Elmer and Lewis Fusse and oth
ers. of Atlanta, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Nichols Sunday.
Ringgold News
The Henry County Singing Con
vention will convene at, Union
church Sunday afternoon August
3rd. Everybody is cordially
ed to attend.
Revival services begin Sunday
morning August 3 at Union church
led by Rev. C. C. Heard,
Mrs. Carl Cunningham and
Mrs. Rob Carlton of Atlanta were
recent guests of Misses Ida and
Mmler Patrick.
] Miss Margaret Patrick of Sauls
bury, N. C., spent the past week
with relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Chasteen and
Miss Lorena Chasteen of Griffin
were recent visitors in bur sec
tion.
Mis. Fannie Apples and
Hammock attended the Rosser re
union at Shingieroof campground
Sunday. /
The annual 4-H Club picnic will
be held at’Mt. Zion Camp Ground
next Friday August 1st.
Mxr. T. W. Futral spent last
week in Atlanta visiting relatives.
Miss Sara Futral and Sara Pa
trick have returned from Salis
bury. N. C, where they were guests
for three weeks of Miss Margaret
Patrick.
Miss Julia Pullin spent a few
days last week with Miss Mildred
Williams at Locust Grove.
Mrs. Mahala Burks and Mrs.
Byats Burks have returned from
Ohio where they were guests of
Mrs. Claud Shirley for several
weeks.
Miss Mattie Joe Pullin spent the
week-end with Miss Mildred Bar
at Luejla.
Mr .and Mrs. Pery Alien of
| Jenktnsburg. .spent Allen. Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Master Woodrow Patrick of
Griffin is spending this week with
j Leon Mr. Pullin, and Mrs. Jr. Parks Henderson
i
{have j to points returned of interest from a in motor the north trip
| and Andrew east. Welden has returned to
j his home at Plant City, Fla.
i
Mrs. Grover Patrick spent last
week at Marietta visiting relatives.
Miss Mary Clements of Monti
cello. Fla.. Miss Lillian Clements
culture. Certified Cremo’s
purity is safeguarded along
every step of the way by amaz
ing Inventions that bind, roll,
wrap and tip the cigarsl
WEDNESDAY, JULY' 3 30
of Decatur and W. A. Clements
of McDonough were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Patrick.
Miss Swfeet Patrick i* the gugst
of her brother, Grover Patrick.
Little Mh» Barbara Ann Patrick
and her grandmother Clements are
spending a few days at Flippen
this week, as guests of Mrs. Hugh
ston Turner and are attending the y
revival services led by Rev. R. A.
Eamondson of Atlanta.
Farmers are feeling more opti-*
miatic over prospepts of a good
crop since the rains of the past
week.
WOOD 4$
FOR SALE
Good blocks, cut stove length
$5.00 cord, $2.75 half cord
— CALL —
LEO
PHONE 1047
*21