The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, May 06, 1923, Image 12

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?AGE FOUR THB flANITHR-HBRALU. ATHBNB, GEORGIA SUNDAY. MAY 6, 1823. THE BANNER-HERALD ATHENS. GA. Published Every Evening During the Week Except Saturasy _»nd_ on Sunday Morning by The Entered at the Athena Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress March 8. 1879. ifuniiK kiic iiw» s l ' — Athens Publishing Company, Athena, G*« B. BRASWELL Publisher and General Manager E. MARTIN Managing Editor a MEMBER OK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub. Ication of.all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited i n this paper, and also .he local news published therein. All rights o1 ■j ypublication of special dispatches are also seserved, h$2dd C. Erwin, ident. Bowdrc Phinizy, Secretary and Treasurer. DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU? A Littlo of Everything And Not Muck of Anything. By HUGO ROWE i Address all Business Communications direct to the Athens Publish- jag Company, not to individuals. News articles intended for publica tion ibauld be addressed to The Banner-Herald. CONDEMNS PISTOL TOTING “We would accomplish more for the safety and I Bkcredness of human life by doing away with the I ipistol than hv scrapping ten battleships,” declared ■Chief City Magistrate McAdoo of New York City a few days ago while speaking before a meeting of the International Police Conference, i ■ Continuing Mr. McAdoo said, “Even the ladies, God bless them, have taken to carrying guns, and it hvon’t be long before the bride will march to the altar with the family pistol strapped to her waist.” “The pistol is coming to he the national badge of the American. Our reputation is smirched as a lot pf shooters and gun-carriers. And we’ll never get linywhere until we do away with the notion that to have a gun gives the honest citizen and advantage «ver the crook. ln>'T have been held up and I’m glad that I had no gun. If there had been one on me I know the two lit tle amateur thugs that held me up would have hit me 6n the head after taking it from me.” S Magistrate McAdoo in right. The habit of pistol toting in this country has become so general that al lhost every altercation results'in one or more of the participants being shot. Homicides nre almost un heard of in England and many other countries and authorities attribute the low rate mainly to the strin gent anti-pistol laws of these countries. Our state laws are too lax in reference to fire arms and when it is realized that human life *i.H more sacred than the making of money by the fire arms trusts we may have them tightened. In Argentine having a pistol without a license is a prison offense and killing a man in self- defense with a pistol does not excuse the man doing the killing if he did it with a gun for which he had ho license. ' Too many of our people whip out a pistol as they might a pocket knife and as loiijf as our pistol laws are as lax ns they nre, and those thnt we have en forced as loosely as they are conditions are going to become worse instead .of better. WHY NOT RAISE MEAT? i. i:< The Cordele Dispatch is out with a most creditable edition of thirty pages filled with foreign and local r .news, write-ups of the business houses and manu- facturiug industries, the municipality and the county and a large amount of advertising of the business [f concerns of the community. The Dispatch is one of irfbe newspapers in the state and the people* of ! Cordele show their appreciation of it by giving to _HUh newspaper a liberal support. The Trade Edi tion is one of .the most complete newspapers we have (Vjfgen in many years and to the management is due much credit. Professor William II. McCabe is buried in New York City. He died on the exact date he predicted a month previously. Figured it out by the conjunction of planets and occultism of astrology, to which he devoted his life. The superstitious will never forget it. The simple truth is, McCabe’s death was either a coincidence or the result of imagination. He was in good health until he predicted his death. dead and g«»no. Keep it. dear friend, and show ft; Show it to those who will lend Governor Percival P. Baxter, of Maine, has risen above pet ty jealousies and sectional prejudices and demanded that every Confederate battle flag cap tured during the Civil war by tho soldiers of Maine he returned to the Southern states from which they came. Governor Baxter said: “It does without doubt mean iny isolltical death, but I Insist that every Confederate battle flag captured by Maine regi ments in the Civil war be re turned to the Southern states from which they came.” Governor Baxter is a statesman and a red-blooded American In every sense of the word. lie has the backbone and manhood to stand | p.-t for that which he believes to be right, and Ills people should j show their appreciation of bis t frankness, broad and liberal-. H mindedness with high ideals. Ho t ' w - is a true American citizen who Rub the faith that was In knows no North, no South, but strong Indeed, stand** for a reunited country and our poverty To tho talo that tfhls trifle can toll, Of a liberty born of a patriot’s dream, . Of a storm-cradlcd nation that fell. ‘ Too poor to possess the precious ores, And too much of a stranger to borrow, We issued today our promise to pay. And hope to redeem on the mor row. The days rolled by and weeks be came years. But our coffers wer^ empty still; Coin was so rare, that the treas- ury’d quake dollar should drop In tho crop has been thinned out our far mers should all keep a flock. THE COLD STORAGE plant is fast filling up and farmers are usyng it tor perishable goods and meats- MR. JOHN BROWN, a leading ar.d .successful farmer of Pocatali- go, Madison county, was in the city yesterday. i.Mr. Brown is a far mer who has always li^pd at home anti boarded at the same place and when he comes to town brings something to sell, and carries home mure money than he brought with him. A CITIZEN of Bogart says that taxes are about as hard on them as the boll weevil, that their school tax along is $7 on the $1,000. He says there are either too many of ficers or not an equal division of the burden of taxation. Q/ippie Sauce we dls- ONE OF OUR oldest brickma kons says the best brick in any building in Athons, and the best brick-work,,are in the building oc cupied by Davison-Nicholson Co. The brick were made by M. B. Mc- as Ginty, near the city, and the work of laying them well done. ■ t . South Georgia has come to the front in the meat industry which has grown to be one of the best paying of all resources in thnt section. The Wrightsvillc ’ Headlight has the following to-say of the hog sale held there last week : I Four big car loads of hogs were sold here Wednesday of last week to the highest bidder, the largest lot of hogs in weight yet sold at any ‘ ; . co-operative sale since they began in this county i two years ago. There were 60,247 pounds of the mix-fed hogs, which sold at a price of $7.17 for ... tops. * * _ There is no reason why North Georgia should not do as much in hog raising as have the people of South ~ Georgia. The climatic conditions arc mild and vege- attlon is in growth the yeo,r round making it inexpen sive to raise hogs. With a determined effort on the part of the farmers meat sufficient to supply home consumption could be raised nnd a large surplus for the markets. Georgia-raised meat is just as good as Western raised meat anti its production costs far less. Every farmer should see to it that a sufficiency of meat is raised for his needs and like the South,Geor gia farmer pool his surplus and sell to the market, the proceeds being additional income from his farm production. The time has come when we must utilize our. re sources, and with practical economy practiced there arc many wajl in which this section of the state can be made the richest of all. The opportunities and the resources are here—it is up to us to develop them and profit from thnt which we arc now throwing * away or else not taking advantage of the things which arc right here under ouV eyes and awaiting ■ our development. ! THE BIBLE CONFERENCE -c.The Bible Conference has come and gone. "It was a fine event for Athon!. The men and women who have stood by this religious event euch year should . receive the thanks of the people of this section for having made it possible to hoar such earnest and pro ficient students of the Bible the last two weeks. ...Athens Is proud to claim as her very own two of' the distinguished men who preached during the Con- » ference. The other,- Dr. Len G. Broughton, is so well known herd-that ho is regarded as a son of Athens. We are happy to have had them here the last two P ks where their inspiring messages of the Gospel b'e wrought much good. The Bible Conference has been a blessing to the r community. It has been a spiritual feast. It should be and will undoubtedly continue to be an nnnual fevent. , •erned. Ami this little check represented the pay. That our suffering veterans earned. We knew it had hardly a. value In sold, Yet as gold each soldier received y It . . |It gazed In oitr eyes with a prom inent entirely different from that ! I HO P a y* which was built -during the T,On And each Southern patriot believed under tho most unusual conditions j • I*- Ihe world lias ever known of j Bu$ our boys thoughtj little of the bettermont of mankinds Speaking of the attitude of Governor Baxter in demanding the return of all Confederate ' flags taken during the CiVil < war is a forerunner of wttiat may lie oxiN'cted from other states. I Time and conditions change many 1 things nnd help to build strife, turmoil and the arraying of friends against friends and even brothers against brothers. The World War has in a great measure eliminated much of tho prejudices existing for thees many years between thoso whoso fath- woro the grey and those whoso fathers wore the blue. It Is well that it ’did, and the sooner the politicians who •captalizc prejudien and hatred towards tho south realize it. tho better off will ho hotn» sections of^the country. Dur ing tills war nnd after Leo had nderod at Apixmiattox, for- i thronged) the southern coun try committing all kinds of dep redations and confiscated every thing which came in sight, leaving price or of pay Or of hills that were overdue; We know t.hat If It brought us our broad today, ’Twaic Iho best our poor country could do. Keep It; it tells all our history over. From the birth of the dream to the last; Modest, nnidi born of tho angel of Hope, Like* our hope of success, *‘lt ixissed.” The United States Depart ment of Agriculture recognizes In the moving pictures a great field for exploiting and dem onstrating the possibilities of use- ompty cribs, Hmoko-hoiiare nnd j,nines In making common prop corralling live stock, mules nnd horses and appropriating them to their own use. It was a trying time for our people, hut they had given their lives nnd now they were ready to glvo their property anti all belongings nnd start over anew, which they did nnd slnco those days they have built lip tho rlcteat section of tho nation in agriculture nnd manufacturing In dustries. The lines on tho bnck of tho Confederate notes, written by j rty of the knowledge developed oy Its scientific Investigations, and in acquainting the public with tho methods nnd significance of im portant.* lines being carried on by the department and the co-op erating r.tato institutions. Government representatives will he In attendance on tho National Convention of tho Motion Picture Theatrd Owners' in Chicago this month. Tho motion picture business has Major S. A. Jones better describe grown to he nn institution, as it tho truo conditions existing in tho wore, developing nnd assembling south at tho closo of tho war: j Instructive and .educational Infor- .. , libation which cannot ho received Representing nothing on Cod’s, through ’ any other source or earth now, (agency, it Is a wholesome form of And naught In the waters below amusement and on® which Is worth K* 1 whllo of all classes of the peoplo As a plcdfco of n Nation that’s 1 to i>atronlze. J Around Athens I With Col.T. Lorry Gantt enough calcium arsenate to combat the boll weevil. - but farmers had better not postpone buying too long. OCONEE FARMERS say Mr. BRICK ARE being hauled for "21 doing sewer work on Oglclborno , £ If ,..,f ,P r t?,Y c , < j 1 °^ a friends i* 1 ? 11 avenue. The residents aro rojolc- ] p‘ 'S ! t0 ° j’JJ f? 0 !",. 1 " Inir over- havim. Io iir-dolnov,i in,- ‘rimldcs „nd tribulations. The Oco- provoments made. That sestion of "mproved noidtrv'anil'eaLoi ud m Athena is fast improving and with ! ’ lr "'V h hPrhn^i XL RK “ J " * tCr WiU " P ' j old ”av« blTht Idly build up. and 200.000 eggs. Besides, i,»r. MR, GRADY HENSON owns on ' t Oconeef »c o'f the r muirSal^ cTa, f "anT;“crm d e C#t Wo e od y A, h n C fe?J (' m ° rlca ’ ?T d ? black homes in this section. .He has a is inc TthS Tst a^d biggest in t he f^Iades. lovely residence, with all modern ! iw2EL P n ? . 6f *»?.!»«* "bowed where he MR. HENRY TUCK says farm ers cannot depend altogether on poison to grow cotton, but they must make a big noise and keep a double shuffle hustle on. Mr. Tuck he has great faith in that old v’s plan to use pine brush to beat off weevils. You must keep the things going and never let up, or the weevils will get you. MR. J. T. ANDERSON a few days sold to Mr. Roy Brown, n Rehab student, five and a half acres of land with a four-room house, on the Commerce road, about a mile and a half from town. Several other young soldjcrs arc hunting small farms around town, as they are anxious to locate here. Some want to buy around Winter- vilie. * MR. JOHN CARUTH, a former citizen of Madison county, but who is now living in Washington coun ty, Georgia, is in the city Qiid will *I>end the sumpier wth his daugh ters in Oconee ami Madison ties. MR. W. M. SPENCER, the po- ♦ato king of Jackuor. county, wno has a fine farm near Attica, says he «.ii go in for foo-.’ er. i*s and plant not over five acres in cot ton to the plow. Mr. Spencer says he will splice his money crops out with sweet potatoes and can grow over 200 busheis to the acre. MR. WALTER HODGSON, who has recently returned from New York brought bnck an automatic dancing figure of King Tut’s wife, which is on display at the Piggly- Wiggly store on Clayton street. It is used to advertise two Athens products. Noo-Name coffee nnd the Crystal Flake lard compound, man ufactured by the Hodgson Com- P4ny. Mr. Walter Hodgson says their goods are meeting with a splendid nale over in the Piedmont Section of the Carolinas. MR. Wm. McPHERSON of Ath ens. has one of the finest herds of high bred Jerseys in Georgia. He gets from $200 for bull calves at six months old. DR. BURSON says our Athens market is supplied with much bet ter beef since tick, eradication, and our farmers are making better pasturage. In 1910 the Ag. Col- iceo lost some fine cattle from ticks but we can now raise the finest imported strains and cattle improve in both milk and beef. THIS WEEK there camped, in Athens a car with two men from Pennsylvania. They had been on an expedition to South America, and also spent weeks exploring every part of the Florida Ever glades- They had in boxes two large monkeys, captured in South lovely residence, with all modern hearted min fn Oconee "county' improvements, and trom the cleva-' Georgia or tho south. tion on which his home stunds one can look over the surrounding coun try as far as the eye tan repch. OCONEE HAS an organized You can see on a denr day the poultry club to handle eggs. The Blue Ridge chain. Mr. Henson has eggs are sold through cu-dpcrativc a farm of 36 acres nnd he is bring- methods and they will be candled, ing it up to the highest state of sorted and packed by a committee productiveness. He 1ms everything and then shipped to the best nmr- to make life happy. This is one of keta. Uy this means they will get the finest sections of Oconee and the beat price for their eggs and thickly settled with intensive and ■ their club will establish a reputa up-to-date farmers. [tion for reliability. A GENTLEMAN says that not' - fI? n . A «i, LV -inrk .i,„ fur from Winder there was once a 1 *, * AblltORD, ono of tho spot where hot mud boiled ut> and y 6 “ n £ f bas . ,ncs f * mcn nr . ,rt it is a great natural curiosity, lie f|. nHn< i ,tr wr 0 f was in says he has heard about it, but has the city Wednesday. He says their never seen the place himself. We b ? nk , th ' 8 wcck r< £ e, \ cd a car-load have never heard before'of this 5 fourtw, ’ n « ra f° Jerseya from spot und would like for some «nc' Nt ?!* m county, *11 select animals informed' to let us hour if such u a,, V me milkers. They will be sold place exists and where located. to farn )crs over Oconee at exact cost and on easy terms. Their ban.; AS THE UANNER.HERALDfc.t 8U o rr^ df0Ur , flUC ^ IIS | 0 foretold, there will I* a fine crop u°, y ' T ? e ob ; of all kind* of fruit this year. "i.‘ he .t an |f 8 ‘.° °" d Fruit in never all killed in M 'n-h. ‘ Monty has boon left on tho trees ' 1 . 1, ' J,r ' ASliford has kindly and blackberries are now bloom,ng. had been bitten 'on a finger by _ rattlesnake and his arm bitten by one of the monkeys. He said lm did not suffer much from the snake bite, but was in a hospital for two months from the wound in his arm by the monkey. They hnd a hard time, had run out of money and stopped over until they could write home for funds. One of the i was t»me nnd ran around Wull Street has got Piggly Wiggly Clarence Saunders squealing. When his original “come and get It" guy thought he had the street wolves yelp ing for help he finds he is the one “treed.” Out In his home burg, Memphis,- he carries full page spreads in the dailies call ing on the people to buy his stock “to save his personal fortune." Well, there ain’t noth ing so handy as that old ner vine bottle If you can uncork it at the right time and get away with It. Those whom Wall street has caught ,wlth a few cotton contracts on a de clining market might try this scheme. They will at least find our if the neighbors are as philanthropic as Saunders be lieves. Maybe tho* he has Just been reading the life and say ings of one P. T. Barnum. NOTICE ABOUT ALL THOSE GIHLS’ RIFLE TEAMS » PRACTICING? Mother, may I go out to Wed?” Yes, my darling daughter; But when you shoot him, kill him dead, Like every good wife oughter.” Charlie Harvey of Peacham, Ver mont. a brother to George, former ly of the same vlllago but now of the court of St, James, is a paint er, nnd reputed to bo a good one pt that. Well his brother Is a good Illustrator—of a political ass. The* latsst report frdm the fa* mous foursome of the Cloverhurs' links, 8tegsman, White, Conover and Woodruff, was that Larry w«; ctill trying to kill "that snake In tho creek going to number 12. WELL DOC WHY PREACH TO THE WOMEN, THEY'RE WAY8 DOING THEIR PART, CHEMICALLY SPEAKlN'. Dr. 11. C. Ilerty for whom an athletic field wa* named in this burg certainly believes In talkinf straight to tho consumers when h« ants to drive n commercial polni home. The other d*y whllo talking meeting of the Home Econo mica Association In New York he appealed to the women of tyls ooun try to keep the dye and chemical business of the United States in its present leading position of thf world. The Doc. has evidently taken a dtroll down tho town’s main thoroughfare nnd after get ting an eyefull of all those gaily colored glad rags with faces to match realized that should the fad change suddenly to sombernes* the dye business of the country would go to pot. IT WILL TAKE MORE THAN A PAUPER’S OATH AND A DOC TOR’S CERTIFICATE TO CON VINCE A CRACKER JURY THAT BIRD WHO RIDES AROUND A BIG AUTOMOBILE AND GULPS MOONSHINE CAN’T GET ABOUT $40.00 EVERY THIRTY DAYS FOR ALIMONY. TOURISTS BEWARE! Engineers say that ths Eiffel tower will bt falling down in 1946. Now wont all thoso tour ists bo out of luck in 1947? A flock of birds who don’t like t0 # <lrlnk fix* water and lemonade In* the summertime are going to pay five millions in passage fares to “sail with the Lusitania” July 4th. Wonder how, many oI that gang wanted one of tne several free passages they could have got ten on the big tub back about 1918* A Puzzle A Day Starting at any point In the above square, draw one continuous line that will pass through every open ing In the circle and the four con necting lines. No opening may be gone through twice. Tho lino may begin at any point and end any where. There are many different routes which may be taken.— Yeaterday’a answer: If four men walk around a ono- mile race track, the first man at the rate of five miles nn hour, the second four, tho tihtnd three, and tho fourth two, they will meet at the starting point In Just one hour. The first man will have walked five miles, the second four, tho third three, nnd the fourth two. Infinitive Is Not Bar to U. S. Citizenship Split Berton Braky's Daily Poem There’s ff prospect most alluring Jn the thought of motor-touring And of gypsying the highways far away from our abodes, Till amid our contemplation, We receive the information— “Heaven help us, they've been ‘working on the roads'!" We can navigate the washes Where thfe water whirls and sloshes, We can ahug through dismal marshes full of snakes and frogs and toads; But we raise a doleful chorus When this terror Is before us, Heaven help us, they've been "working on the roada.” For we know the perils lurk big Where the highway gangs are working, How tboy dump the mud In moun tains and tho atone in mighty loads; When no other vision daunts us Here’s a fear that always haunts’ us— Heaven help us, they’ve been "working on thd roads." Punturc, blowouts, engine trouble Fret the owner of a bubble, And he’s always getting tangled In tho local lairs and codes; But there's none of these that feazes Liko that awrullcst of phrases, Heaven help us, they’ve been ’’working on the roads." CHICAGO.—Ono can become a good United States citizen without knowing an accurate definition of a split Infinitive. This Is the view of Poter A. Mor- tenson, superintendent of scliools, on the Incident of tho eighth grade pupil at Herkimer, N. Y„ who was winnoion s new parllai flogged by tho principal of tho buildings, will bo In position school for failure to glvo a proper summer. Peace Ttfwer War Ends After Four-Year Fight TORONTO.—Tho war over Can ada's “Peace Tower” Is at an end, and tho tower, crowning glory of tho •(Pomlnlnn’s new parliament this definition of a split Infinitive. Hollis Joy, 21, Boston student, says he hasn't been kissed. Wo say he doesn’t know hi3 last name. For four years, differences be tween chief architect John Pear son and tho federal department of public works, have delayed com pletion of the "peace tower.” EVERETT TRUE By Condo and poultry business that ..... SAM FUNKENSTKIN says he I ‘L?,*L V “. l : Uc| ,* sha » iro lived in California and when 1 J-rti.-los '"‘“""‘•“o' 1 in one »/ my prohibition **nmo about the grape I growers considered themselve s I [“i" 81 ' JJ 1 ® 7 ' v< ' re m-'lting' , MI£. GEORGE O’KELLEY has fkjj 1 K r apcs , r " r jr m °' .n 1 ’! 1 M>« fioh't-bred Poland China hogs they begnn to advertise their in Georgia. One of his brood sows • now getting about weighs over 700 ponds. This week are K r <> wn home. them. Mr* h unken-1 he shipped a consignment of hogs tlw ^ ... a 11....... - ~ • ... — - Irish governmedt will bavo a de ficit of $100,000,000, proving It Is run on tho American plan. New York hotel Are, 40 jumned on mattresses, but aide- walk would have been softer. gtap^s and arc $160 a ton for I stein sdys farmers around Athens £ Gain^vidc^cSriir"^^" can do the same by raising other forging to the front as headquar- crops than cotton, like potatoes, tors for high bred swine, peanuts, poultry and go into the cattle nnd dairying business. ' • » HALL VAUGHN, the boy Berk- MRX STETSON is do^g a nice,shire breeder, last week sold $90 business at her Unger Longer worth *of pigs and has seventy Lodge on Oglethorpe avenue. She ready for sale. Hal has high-bred Is also selling lovely fancy work Derkshires and is shipping pigs all made by tho ladies of Athens. Mrs. over the country. Ift will issue an Stetson is a grand-daughter of illustrated catalogue. Mrs. Lamar Cobb and every after- > non her beautiful and artistic room j DR. BURSON says there is more is crowded. . . money in spring Iambs than any un stock our farmers can raise. Lambs . MR. NED HODGSON says thri- drop**! in January will be ready fertilizer sales will be about, the for market by Easter, when they same as last season, but most*far-.command the highest price. The F g* higher • grade doctor «ay* sheep are cheaply and He thinks there will • be | easily raised, and now that tne dog j hut tho other had to be kept in a box. THE BOWEN-CREWS Com pany, that owns the yam mill in East Athens, has improved the plant and it is now operating at full capacity. They have 36,000 swindles. . These enterprising gen tlemen are experienced and cessful cotton men and own the large mill at Jewells, In Hancock county, Georgia. They are wel come and valued additions to our population. They purchased a mill that had been closed dow-n nnd nre making a success. These are the kind of new citizens that Athens most needs. THERE ARE so many ways to make money in this section. Mr Epps, on Oglethorpe avenue, has a bed 4 by 24 feet that he sowed In toipato seed. He has already sold ovtr 141 worth of plants anil you esnnot miss them. We once ordered early plants from Florida and the scacoast, but now they 19? , John E. Talmndge Is chair man of the "Rote’s" "Sun shine Commlteo” und the firs! member ho solicited was Jake Joel nnd when he slapped the geniul J. B. on the back and told him about It Jake said, "Well, wait n minute, let’s see If 1’vo got any rain Insurance.** Seth Pekle who IIus served a hitch Or two In the army. Has played all kinds Of baseball and Even had a few flings At umpiring ’lows that He might Journey down To the Central City For a coupla o’ ball Gamca In a few days If he can get a few Cops and about ateen lleftlen like Larry Conover and Mark Anthony An body guards. If Seth gets up # , f This party he might Have some company.. It might not have been raining anything the past few days but a few bunches of dafodils, t vio lets and the like na the poets would have it but you’d have a hard Job ronverting the farmers to this theory when all that crab grass ac- companlra those little cotton plnntt <out%of the ground about the time that old man boll weevil saunters around for hla first fresh break fast of the year. MAY 11 AMD 16 DAILY SCRMONETTK • Wee to tho robollous children,, uith the Lord, that take counsel, but net of mo; and that covor with a covering, but not of my spirit, that they may jtdd sin te sin.—Isaiah 80:1. . Wherever there |a authority there v la a natural inclination to disobedience.—Hallburton. IN FOREIGN LANDS TINTED TRAVELS ,Sketches by L. W. Redncr. Verses by Hal Cochran. Color the picture with paint or crayons Thla la an advance picture of tbs Rotary and Klwanla holla who wilt march on th, city on thsM dots, for Inter-city mettt. Pm. B. Phinizy nnd J. Bar nett are already practicing up with their beat smile, and heartiest handshakes. They know how to do It. too, ] % mural Eurfand 9ec OvarnA 'kmses fry Che soore*—* And 'rnamij 'have "beeu standing, ffr * Three 'hundred ijeats or wore—