The News and farmer. (Louisville, Ga.) 1875-1967, July 19, 1923, Image 1

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VOLUME 34—NUMBER 27. FID SIT WHICH U BE HD 111 DIED IDE Clin Senator Robert M. LaFollette Issues Statement Regarding Election of Johnson as Min nesota Senator. Madison, Wis, July 17.—1n the election of Magnus Johnson to the United States senate yesterday, “the people of Minnesota fired a shot which will be heard in every section of the country” according to a state ment issued today by Senator Rob ert M. LaFoletfe who supported Mr. Johnson. “The people of the great north west have again spoken their con viction that if representative govern ment is to survive in the United States, private monopoly must be driven out of control of their gov ernment,” the statement says. “The rotion with which the reactionaries comfort themselves that the elec tion of Johnson expresses merely a sectional protest of disgruntled farmers and working men against present economic conditions and government policies is a ridiculous illusion.” Washington. July 17.—Comment ing on the election to the Senate yes terday of Magnus Johnson, farmer labor candidate, Chairman Adams of 4 he republican national committee in a statement tonight declared that “in a general way, the result in Min nesota was a voice of protest against conditions temporarily affecting the farming interests adversely’.* Agri cultural conditions are bound to im prove, he said, adding that the Am erican farmer “can he depended upon in the long run to support the cause of good government, sound econom icf and stable instiutions.” Chairman Hull of the democratic national committee also took occa sion tonight to discuss the election results, declaring in a statement that it constituted “a general condemna tion of dominant republican nation al leadership since 1919—a leader ship that has resulted in the affairs of the nation and of the world drift ing aimlesly along, while our do mestic business conditions are tem porary, artificial and uncertain.” Mr. Adams, pointing out that re turns indicated the democratic can didate polled about 5 per cent of the total vote, said that “certainly the democratic party cannot get hmuch comfort out of this result ** AHA! SAUSAGE SECRET OUT! London—A chemical process has been devised which detects the pres ence of horsemeat in sausage. j Enroll Nbw-FbrOnly | "Vow Can Order a and in a short time it will be yours. If you have delayed placing your order because of the cash outlay necessary—you need wait no longer. j If you have been depriving your family and yourself of the pleasures and benefits of a car because you felt that you could not afford it —order now and know that it will not work any hardship on you. Use the I So plan to ride and be happy, you and your family. Make -the first payment of $5 today | which will be deposited in a local bank at interest. You can add a little each week. Soon the payments, plus the interest paid by the bank, will make the car yours. Come in and learn about this new plan. I ~ Si | LOUISVILLE MOTOR CO. Authorized Ford Dealers LOUISVILLE, GA. I ■ j THE NEWS AND FARMER JEFFERSON COUNTY BOY COMMENDED Daily Communique from The Camp McClellan Messenger “Published *ln the Interest of Those Who Would Build a Greater America” The following cadets have been commended \for excellence exhibited while acting as temporary company commanders of units here. The stu dents mentioned displayed unusual military ability and attracted favor able attention for their work: H. M. Holmes, Spartanburg, S. G., The Citadel. J. H. Mosley, Byron, Ga., Emory University. M. R. Leach, Greenville, S. C., Clemson, Fla. R. T. Catron, Atlanta, Ga., Emory University. W. B. Swain, Holly Knowe, Miss., Castle Heights. L. H. Tapscott. Folkville, Ala., Auburn. L. Andrews, High Point,N. C„ North Carolina State. •T. A. Minor, Macon. Ga., Georgia Tech. G. \V. Murphy. Wadlcy. Ga., Uni versity of Georgia. C. .T. Durham, Woodville, Ga.. Uni versity of Georgia. BOIlEfl EXP! DDES ON TBIIIU SCALDED Macon, Ga.. July 17.—S. R. Young of Union Point. Ga., engineer on the Georgia Railroad between Macon and Augusta; Tom Hall, negro fire man, and Flournev Hill, negro brake man, both of Augusta, Ga., were all slightly scalded tonight shortly after midnight when the boiler of an en gine on an extra freight train en route to Augusta exploded about four miles from Macon. The trainmen were knocked from the engine cab, and received lacera tions about the head when they fell. They were rushed to a Macon hospi tal hut were permitted to leave after their injuries had been dressed. DEATH OF MR. G. H. WILLIAMS Mr. G. H. Williams, of Wadley. died at the home of one of his nephews at Covington, last Thurs day morning. Mr. Williams was about 69 years of age, and a con sistent member of the Presbyterian church. His remains were carried to Wadley for interment in the fam ily cemetery, where they were plac ed beside his wife who had preced ed him to the grave. He is surviv ed by a number of nieces'and neph ews. Mrs. Carroll Garlick is a sis ter-in-law, and Mr. Ivey Rainwater is a grand-nephew.—Waynesboro Citizen. INCOME TUX BILL PASSED BY SENATE Constitutional Ad Valorem Maximum is Reduced to 4 Mills From 5 and S2OO Household Furniture Ex empt. Atlanta, Ga., July 17. —By a vote of 45 to 1. Senator John Camp Da vis, of Rome, being the lone oppo sition, the state senate has passed an income lax bill in the body of which the constitutional ad valorem maximum is reduced lo 4 mills from 5. and S2OO worth of household and kitchen furniture is exempt from all taxation. The victory of the Lankford measure in the senate, providing for an income tax for state purposes only, was far more decisive than its advocates had hoped for. Sen ators Cason, Coates, Smith of the Twenty-third, and Smith of the Thirty-fifth, were absent. There fore, had every member of the sen ate been present and all the ab sentees been against the measure— though it is known at least two of them were for the bill—the vote still would have been in exeess of the two-thirds vote necessary to pass a constitutional amendment. As the bill goes to the house, with the two amendments offered by Senator W. W. Mundy, broaden ing and perfecting the bill, the pro posal in full is as foliow's: "Be it enacted by the general as sembly of Georgia, and it is here by enacted by authority of ihe same That paragraph 1, section 2, article 7, of the constitution of the state of Georgia he and the same is hereby amended by adding at ihe end of said paragraph the following language: “The general assembly sliall also have authority to levy taxes upon incomes, for state purposes only, which taxes may be graduated, the rate in no case to exceed fixe per cent, provided ihat provision shall be made in Ihe law l levying such taxes for crediting the same with the amount of advalorcm taxes paid j to the state during the year for j which such incomes are taxed; and |to provide further for such cxcep | tions as may appear to the general assembly to he reasonable. | “Section 2. Be it further enacted jby the authority aforesaid, that paragraph 2, section 1, article 7, of the constitution be amended by striking therefrom the word “fixe” \ where the same appears in the i fourth line of said paragraph as it is now published in section 6552 of the civil code of Georgia, and sub j stituting therefor the word “four” j so that said paragraph when amend ! ed will read as follows: “The lex’y of taxes on property for one year by the general assem bly for all purposes, except to pro vide for repelling invasion, suppres sing insurrection, or defending the state in time of war, shall not ex ceed four mills on each dollar of the value of the property taxable in the state. Section 3. Be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid: That said article be further amended by striking all of paragraph 1, section 2, article 7, and substituting therefor the following language. “All taxes shall be uniform upon i the same class of subjects and when lad xatorem, assessed on all the j properly subject to be taxed by that method within the territorial limits I of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws and for the purposes authorized by this constitution: pro- I vided the legislature may exempt household and kitchen furniture to the value of S2OO, from taxation for state purposes.” The measure, after passage was immediately transmitted to the house, upon motion of Mr. Lank ford, the effect of which is that the house will tomorrow morning haxe before it the first measure re vising the state tax system, and it j will have been put up to that i branch before the session is half ] over to determine whether or not ! the state’s biggest issue is to be I solved without further delay. Going still further into its program to deal with the biggest issue first and get it out of the way before other leg islation is reached, the senate also has fixed as the special and con | tinuing order for tomorrow' raorn j ing, immediately after unanimous [ consents, the Mason bill to provide for the classification of all prop ! erty in Ihe state for taxation pur | poses. There will most likely be a i longer and more vigorous fight on I that measure than on the income j tax bill, for the senate palpably is j not nearly so united in opinion on | classification as it xvas on income tax; and yet the leaders of the body express the belief that the Mason bill, with probably some amend ments, will be passed before Wed nesday adjournment. It is known that so soon as these two measures have been gotten out of the way and passed over to the i house there is a still further pro gressixe program being worked on in the senate, the purpose, of which is to go straight through with the reform measures and get the decks entirely clear of all that class of legislation before the middle of | next week, unless some action by I the house should block them. The body today took up again the \ Pace bill to create a state bureau or department of auditing and ac counting, but did not finish it be fore adjournment. DROWNS IN BOWL Lodi, Cal., July 17.—Remas Hoffer, one year old son of Jacob Hoffer, wealthy vineyardist of this city, drowned in a gold fish bowl in his home here yesterday. The child’s mother found him head first in the bowl, which contained about four inches of water- Orders taken for Fudge, Divihity and Brown Sugar Candy, Mildred Phillips. LOUISVILLE, GA.. THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1923. According to Expectations at Present, Turkish Peace Treaty Will Be Signed July 24 or 25 Allied and Turkish Delegates at Lausanne Will Be Sign atories of Main Treaty and Other Documents. Lausanne. July 17-p The Turkish peace treaty will he signed July 24 or 25, according to present expecta lions. The allied and Turkish dele gales now at Lausanne will he the signatories of the main treaty and the other documents to bp signed including the agreement for control of the Turkish straits. The Russian soviet government has been invited by telegraph to take part in the signing of the straits convention. The agreement reached last night on the disputed questions of con cessions and the evacuation of Turk ish soil by foreign troops will be adopted at a plenary session of tlv conference this afternoon, it. is ex pected. The accord presents a victory for the United States whose represen tative, Joseph C. Grew, minister to Switzerland, was successful in his insistence that the policy of the open floor and equal opportunity in the Near East he adopted. Had it not been for his tenacity the tenta tive agreement, made last week, un favorable to the United States in terests would have been included in the treaty. Pasha Fatigued Through numerous conferences with Pasha head of the Turkish dele gation who appeared utterly fatigued from the constant pressure from both sides when the session be gan. Mr. Gr<> won him over against tlie pleas of the British and French plenipotentiaries. And having won their st rrflgle to eliminate from the peace treaty all future preferential concession rights of foreign companies and all of ficial confirmation of doubtful ex isting concessions the American rep resentatives now will devote them selves to completion of the new Turkish-American treaty. The inside story of the meeting yesterday when the peace made a week ago was “patched up” as one allied delegate described it, is of a fierce battle waged over the ques tion of oil fields in Mesopotamia which the English claim under the provisions of the concessions of the Turkish petroleum company. Though none of the American del egation was present it was appar ent that American influence was dominant in the conference chamber and that the stringent application of Mr. Grew’s resistance was strong enough to permit Ismet Pasha to hold until the finish. ~ Ismet Pasha was unshakable be fore all the allied onslaughts. One by one he turned down every for mula presented even those modified which he calculated would give any confirmation to the British com pany's petroleum concessions in the treaty. He insisted that there was grave doubt of its validity and said that the question should be referred to arbitration by the international court of justiceN Allies Surrender Finally the allies, led by the Brit ish surrender. But the British an nounced their intention to make a public statement at the open con ference meeting, setting forth their right to oil concessions, just as the French intend to do regarding their j rights concerning the Ottoman debt. | The Turks previously had won a ! victory by keeping all confirmation I of their obligations under the debt j out of the Lausanne treaty’. The allied agreement to drop their demands for future preferential right to Turkish contracts is con-! sidered here an attempt to make the American public feel that Europe re spects. American doctrine and wishes to co-operate with American capital there. However, there is a disposi- j tion to believe that Americans, with | the Chester concessions already ac-1 quired have big privileges in Tur- 1 key. YOUIVG GIRL KILLED IN AUTO ACCIDENT Mrs, R. B. Walker, Mother of Child Killed, Reported to Be Resting Well Despite Re ■ ports She Would Die. Greenville, S. C., July 17. —Mrs. R. | B. Walker, wife of Dr. R. B. Walk ' er, of Centerville, Ala., whose two ! year-old daughter, Carolyn, was in [ stantly killed in an automobile ac cident om the Dunham bridge road j about 15 miles west of Greenville | early today in which various other j members of the party enroute from | Alabama to Woodrow, N. C-, re ceived various injuries was reported to be resting well at the city hos pital here tonight. Despite earlier reports that she would die physi cians at tljc hospital tonight said that the woman would recover. The car, a heavy one, slipped off the road on a curve. The roadbed was said to have been wet as the result of showers. Miss Helen Moore, of Woodrow, N. C.. has been discharged from the hospital. Mrs. R. C. Goodson, of the same place, escaped practically un hurt. Dr. Walker received only mi nor bruises. The body of the Walker baby whose head and shoulders were badly crushed when the car turned over, will be shipped to Woodrow tomorrow, it is said. Thi *ee Bomb Plots Against Woman Chelsea, Mass., July 17.—Postal inspectors today described three bomb plots against Mrs. Grace Lewis of this city. Last Satur day, Mrs. Sadi Bennett opened a package addressed to Mrs. Lewis, her sister in law, and found a book. She turned a few pages and there came an explosion which lacerated her, threw her to the floor and burned her arms. In May, Mrs. Lewis received a small cabinet through the mails. When she opened it an explosion resulted which burned her severely. Several weeks la ter an explosive was found park ed about the filament in an elec tric light bulb outside her apart ment which failed to light No arrests have resulted from several investigations hut the in spectors believe the intent was not to kill but to maim. ORDERS HARVESTER COMPANY TO BREAK INTO THE PARTS Dissolution Decree of 1918 Inadequate to Break Up Restraint of Trade and Re store Competition. Washington, July 17.—. Separation of the International Harvester Com pany into at least three distinct cor porations, with wholly separate own ers, stockholders and officials, was demanded by Attorney-General Daugherty, today in a petition filed in the federal district court at St. ! Paul, Minn. Such a step is necessary, the attor ney’s general’s petition declared, be cause the dissolution decree origin ally entered against the company in 1918 had proved “inadequate* to break up restraint of trade and re store compeition in the production of harvesting machines and other farm implements. The court was asked by the peti tion to enter anew decree holding that Hie Harvesting company ‘still is a combination in restraint of in terstate trade and commerce in har vesting machinery, and still is mono polizing and attempting to monopo lize said trade and commerce in vio lation of the Sherman anti-trust law and contrary to the several opinions, and decrees of this court.’ Vision May Be Realized. Unless steps are taken to effect a real dissolution, the petition con tinued, “the monopolistic control ex erted by the defendant will increase and the vision of complete monopo ly which the organizers of the com pany had in 1902 will be complete ly realized,” to the detriment of the ; farmers of the country in their pur ! chases of farm machinery. The action of the attorney-general was taken after prolonged confer ences among government officials, and follows the line suggested by’ the federal trade commission in a report lo the senate in 1920. The petition declared that a reasonable “test pe riod” has been given the corpora tion since the close of the World War, as provided in the original de cree, to rearrange its organization in the interest of the public. That pe riod having passed, it was added, “the United States now has the right to such further relief as be ne cessary to restore competitive condi tions.” Specifically, the petition cited the International Harvester Company the international Flax Twine Company, tc Wisconsin Steel Company, the, Wisconsin Lumber Company ,tlie 11- ' linois Northern Railway, and the Chicago, West Pullman and Southern Railroad Company and the officers and directors of al lthesc concerns, as parties to the alleged combination. Chicago, July 17.—Prices of har vesting machinery are the result of \ vigorous competition. which the Sherman laxv was enacted to pre serx’e, and are fairly comparable with the prices of other implements fixed by normal competition, Alex ander Leggc, president of the In ternational Harvester Company, said today in a statement comm'enting on the government suit against the company filed in federal district court at St. Paul. The suit, Mr. Leggc said, is a con tinuation of ihe government action begun eleven years ago. The harves ter company, he said, was acquitted by the court findings of any wrong ful dealings or unfair practices, but in 1918, a decree was entered, to insure fullest competition requiring tile company to sell to competitors. That decr.ee, he said, provided that at the end of a test period which has now expired, the government might ask the court to determine whether the free competition con templated by the Sherman anti-trust law exists in the farm implement industry. This step, the government is now taking, the statement said. The situation in which the manu facturers of farm implements find themselves, the statement said, is due to the business depression that started in 1920. CHASE IN PAJAMAS St. Louis, Mo.—Clayton French, clad only in pajamas, pursued a burglar for five blocks, but' the fugitive got away. EXODUS OF FARM LABOR CONTINUES According to Southeastern Fortnightly Crop Report of United States Department of Agriculture. Atlanta, Ga.. July 17-—Exodus of farm labor continues, according to the sout/ea.vrern fortnightly crop report July Ist to July 15th, made public here today by the United States Department of Agriculture. North Carolina, the report added re ports a net gain in some counties at the expense of states further south. The past two weeks, continued the report, have been favorable to all crops except in certain localities which were suffering from rain. A good downpour is now needed by practically al! of the territory, Geor I gia and ffinith Carolina corn need it particularly. Wheat threshing is in full swing in Tennessee, the report said. Iq North Carolina, the harvest is tin usually good, following a favorable season. Considerable quantity of hay has been saved in the territory except where it has been too dry. the re port averred. The report declared tobacco yield : and quality were good and harvest is now over in Florida, South Caro ! lina and Georgia. Considerable Progress In respect to cotton, the report stated all states report considerable progress in the growth of the plant within the past two weeks. The fields are reasonably clean and the j blooms are forming rapidly in the south and commencing in upper re gions. Roll weevils are particularly had in south Georgia and Florida, i causing a decline m the condition j figure. This pest, the report added, is re ported very active in the remainder : of the territory although it was held in check by the dry weather during the past two weeks. The crop is so late that the direct weevil damage in the upper part of the belt is hard to forecast and the outturn of the whole crop is problematical. Commenting on the southern fruit outlook the report declared peaches and apples have a less encouraging outlook in North Carolina and Ten nessee. In Georgia th> main com mercial apple section reports favor ably; Georgia peaches are very late , and shipments badly behind last year, but it is expected that the Elhertas will even things up. Both watermelons and cantaloupes have light crops- A considerable acreage of later cowpcas and soy beans is being planted. Peanuts are needing rain, the report concluded. P. T. A. NOTES The Executive Board of Louisville P. T- A. held its regular monthly meeting at the residence of Mrs. \V. | S. Murphy Thursday morning, Julx I the twelfth, at ten-thirty o'clock. The main topic of discussion was I the menu and preparation of same i for the Kiwanis banquet which is to he held on the night of July 23rd. ! This is not to be a money-making ! scheme, as members of P. T. A. take ! real pleasure in doing this for an : organization which means so much for the welfare of our town. The P. T. A. extend to the Kiwan ians their best wishes in the good work which they undertake. Mrs. Herman Smith registered as 1 a representative from Louisville P. I’. A- at the institute which was ro j cently held in Athens. She took notes and has knidly sent them and interesting literature to our associa i tion. Mrs. Bruce Carr Jones, our state j president, with her little girl, left on Sunday for an extended trip to the West. After attending state and national convention and two P. T. A. institutes, one at Mercer and one at the University of Georgia, she fee's the need of this long prom ised trip. On ner return home, she with Mrs. R. L. Griffin, Tenth Dis trict P. T. A. chairman, Mr. Reeves Little and others wiil visit the schools of Jefferson County. PREPARATION OF CHILDREN FOR LIFE’S DUTIES PRINCIPAL WORK OF ASSOCIATION The short course in Parent-Teach er work at the state university has passed into history. Tennessee and Georgia are the first states to take advantage of this course which was presented at Columbia University last summer for the first time. The South is in the vanguard. Five full and crowded days were given up to the work, with much j needed parliamentary law drills j daily by Dr. Stewart. The national ! field secretary and state president | were assisted by talks from .‘ic vari- I ous state agencies, such as health, j public welfare, education, etc., show ing definitely how to correlate the Parent-Teacher work with these agencies. The main object of the course was to help leaders. It was attended by a picked group from all sections of the state who will go back and give what they learned to their associa tions. They are the channel through which those, who could not attend, J will receive the splendid benefits of | this course. Every phase of the work from the pre-school circle to the “formative age” to the high school ! P.-T. A., with its adolescence prob lem, from the city association, with its mill problem, to the rural one was touched upon, the women who came proving themselves real stu dents by sitting through the course for hours at a time, voluntarily “cut ting” chapel and other diversions in order to hear all that the speak ers had to offer relative to this uork HOPKINS HAS A SPLENDID FARM A reporter of The Citizen enjov ed a ride oxer the farm of Mra. H C. Hopkins, near the city in the genial company of Mr. Enon K. Chance, and it was a very pleasant occasion. The cotton crop on this farm is one of the best we have seen in the county ; the stand is good and the plant is in good condition and fruiting well. It has been poison ed h‘ the proper intervals, and the pro As are for a good yield. v. * '/'• Kirkland, the negro •' place, has followed ■‘very detail, and for this ver.v r v as just cause for feeling proud crop. There is also an exper. *' plat super intended by the cNv, . '*irm dem onstrator, G. D. ( lcK.. .s. who is the agricultural and vocational teacher at the Waynesboro High and Industrial School, who is as sisted by Kirkland, and they have made a splendid demonstration of farming under intelligent superin? tendence. This : lot and should he seen by every one inter ested in farming under boll weevil conditions. Especially should the colored farmers see this crop, as it is being bandied by a colored man. The colored farmers could see what is being done by one of their race, and forget their discourage ment. We congratulate Mr. Hop kins upon his good prospects and his excellent farm. From Waynes boro True Citizen. LIQUOR VALUED I! 003,080 SEIZED Lakewood. N. J.. July 17.—Liquors x’aiucd at $369,009 were seized in raids here early today hv forty fed eral prohibition agents and county officials. Lakewood is a fashionable resort, popular with the wealthy all the year round. At the Hotel Marion in Point Pleasant the agents seized sixty cases of liquor, and at automobile agency at the point, thirty quarts of whiskey xx'ere taken. Breaking in a basement floor al the Bartlett Inn, they found a room fitted like a cafe, behind whose slid ing wall panels, whiskey, sherry and gin filled the shelxes- Behind a picture on a wall was found a window gixing access to a storeroom under a rear porch. Sex enty-five cases of liquor were found i here. No arrests were made. — LEAGUE OF NATIONS COST. Geneva—The annual salary roll of ! the interntional Labor Bureau at tached to the League of Nations amounts to $1,748,940. is m m At this special time, during the midst of the breeding season for insects and rodents, nothing will give better returns for investment than a drive against these pests. ,4 Sweet Dreams Walker’s Devilment Kreso Dip No. 6 Disinfectant Red Wing Insect Powder Elkay’s Rat Paste Royal Rat Paste Rat Biscuit Legear’s Louse Killer We have dandy little sprayers for putting out Mosquito and Fly Killers at 35c each. The Louisville Drug Cos. The Ifaxatt Store Louisville, Georgia. “Going Since 1896—Growing All the Time.” $2.00 A YEAR IN ADVAN-” FAVORABLE REPORT ON BILL Mill POOL ROOMS IN Ell \ House Judiciary Commit Reports Favorably on M j sure After Speech By R Dr. Eaks. of Decatur. 'I Atlanta. Ga., July 17.—The he * * judiciary committer thi'* aftern* fl after a lengthy hearing and lari ?J in response fa vigorous speech tI Rex. Dr. Fakes. Methodist mini ii of Decatur, reported favorably a the Woodruff hill to abolish poolroomx in the state, save thtr! in private clubs. The vote was,tl to 9. The Parker bill, to regu al poolrooms and require bond of 'jj erators. separating the races ent 'j ly , was adversely reported 13 to „! A minority report will be filed ; ig| the fight will be taken to the fl j of the house. x l Thr committee on eountv ,W 1 county matters favorably re per c.J the hill by Speaker Neill and R resentative Perkins, of Musco v county, to make the board of co c ty commissioners elective by < people instead of themselves fill all vacancies, after original ,1 pointment by the grand jury. " uI present hoard draws no salary *.‘j meets quarterly. The Neill bill p. a small salary and requires mont! meetings and publication of fin i cial statements. The bill carrier referendum to the people. Rep sentative Hatcher vigorously foun the bill, while Messrs. Neill a F , erkins were strongly in supp ' of it. ; Mr. Hatcher says there will pr< ably be no further fight on t * measure in the house hut num . 011s local committees will join b :. in fighting it before the sen- f i committee. It is said to be a prii 1 I political issue in Muscogee count J Death of J. H. Powell \ It was quite a shock to our ci J zens when it was learned Mond morning that Mr. J. H. Powell w . dead. He was taken Saturday , his plantation near Louisville wi r heart trouble and died Monday mo • ; j°K s Mr. Powell was one of our o! cst and most highly’ respected ci zens. He was a good man. h great faith in God taking care ! those who put their trust in Hi ; | He was a prosperous farmer and bu 1 : ness man. T he town and *ommuni will rrdx* V He leave aw' \ hddre and a host ■ granr enncAv’p ai great grand children ’ inoura-sfj i .. Reporter. Sheppard’s Fly Killer Fly Flu Legear’s Dip Bee Brand Powder Black Flag Powder Rough on Rats / Rat Corn Legear’s Insect Powder