The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, June 26, 1923, Image 1

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Investigate Today! To Regular Subacrlbera THE banner.herald 11X100 Accident Policy Free Dally and 8unday—10 Centa a Week. Eetabllahed 1832 Dally and Sunday—10 Centa a Week. a ** i WEATHER: Probable Light Showers; Cooler. ATHENS COTTON: MIDDLING .. 27 l-2e PREVIOUS CLOSE 27 1 VOL. 91, NO. 114 Associated Press 8orvlce ATHENS, GA., TUESDAY, JUNE 26. 1923. A. B. C. Paper Single Coplea 2 Centa Dally. S Centa Sunday. Over 1300 Register At University For Summer School, More Expected Leading last year’s registration at this time by more than one hundred the number enrolled in the Summer School at the University of Georgia Tuesday had reached 1,300, it was estimated. Students have be$n pouring: into the city since last Saturday, and about ten per cent of the students have not registered, it is believed. Some of the professors meeting classes Tuesday morning found several ntembers of their classes had not registered. This was due to the rush in which the school and faculty has been since tho opening. The total enrollment of the school on August 4 is expected to reach at least two thousand and probably more. The various con ferences of one week duration which will bring members of the Woman’s Clubs and Parent-Teach-! era Association, students to the IDEM DUBOSE OFF TO CAPITAL General Assembly Con venes Wednesday Mom- CHIEF AND THREE AHESUSPENOED Intoxication- Charged Against Chief and Fail ure to Report It to Other' Members of Department. CHIEF IslDROPPED FOR THIRTY DAYS Chief of Detectives Sea- graves and Policemen Moore and Cornelison Suspended For 3 Dai’s. Pour members ot the Athens po lice department were suspended well Message of Hard era Association, siuuenis 10 me • . rpt j »hort course and county school.' WICK 1 nursaay. commissioners will run the enroll-} ment to more than two thousand, it J Representatives Toombs DuBose js expected. iand Frank A. Holden of Clarke Class work at'the school began county^left Athens Tuesday at* Tuesday morning and Tuesday £ en< * t*" e 8 e 8 *)on of the Georgia night the first entertainment, com- / legislature which convenes Wed- rnunity singing, will he conducted. One Case This Year As Against Forty and Thir teen Deaths in 1921 in Clarke. ing At lo O'clock. Fare- Monday by action of thr Civil Service Commlaalon. The men auapendod ure, f.Jlef of Police Henry W. Beuaae, Chief of Detectlvea charity 8earrave« and Policemen Hugh Moore and L C. ccrneliaon. •Chief Beuaae waa auaponded for thirty days dating from Monday after being tried and lound guilty of Intoslcatlon and the other men wore suspended tor three days each for having knowledge of thr MANY LIVES LOST IN NORTHWESTERN STORMS SUNDAY ST. PAUL.—The great northwest is slowly recover ing from the terrible storms which swept over it Sunday. The storms were the wont that the fiorthwest has seen in many years and the inhabitants of the storm swept areas say it was the wont ever lo strike those sections. Nearly a score of deaths at resulted from Sunday’s storms, Walker’s First Address As Chief i Magistrate Here grea; property damage ports revealed. x persons perished when a tor- swept western Bowman and era Adams counties In North ota Sunday nlffbt. Twelvo per- \Vere seriously hurt, one n;ob- fatnlly, and five slightly in jured In this storm. ^hree persons met death in the vicinity of St. Paul, by drowning or PEACES IN HOMES FOR CONVENTION New England States In Grip of Telephone Strike by Operators ‘ff* 1 rf (By Auocialed Prw».) h or Places m Private BOSTON.—Telephone operaton here went out on Homes of Athens For j strike Tuesday morning, and in all other New England States with the exception of Connecticutt The strike was called by one union, which walked out for shorter hours and higher wages. Memtwrs of a rival union remain ed nt Work. Members of the rival Governor-Elect to Deliver i^ l r dc H n u l ron 0n s e HnsTt Cd™". Address of State-Wide 8 - I>-. a farm hind >u killed dur- ncstiay mon ing. Both housti will meet at 10 o’clock, and after organization by the election of officers, will ap point a joint committee to arrange for the inauguration of Clifford Walker as governor next Saturday. The two houses will meet in joint mission sat in the trial, Chatrmar session Thursday to hear the fare-1W. D. Beacham and Commissioners well message of Governor Hard-|j 0 hn H. Grlffeth, Jr., and J. If. wick, whose term expires with the Opting. Inauguration of hi" successor. I Thft * . j ninkin . L . liL Governor Hardwick will *ddress j u h .°?*f® tS the legislature in person, and it is JlL, tr !* °* J 11 **** understood that hi. message will *"15! °‘ he '.“"f"' « ,< T ce be far from colorless and placid, .“/“"ed Sunday, Juna 17. the day Interest Here July 4 to Legionnaires. delivered In Athens. The subject the governor-elect chief's condition and failing to re. j will speak on has not been an- port U to the Commission. .nouncod but his address la very All three members of the Com- likely to be one of state-wide in days following his induction into the of Ice of chief magistrate of tilt state. a windstorm. veral other deaths were report ed! from other sections in Mlnne- and Wisconsin, from drowning, electrocutions and accidents, all Members of the Georgia Amer- at ributed to the storm, lean Legion will hear the tint Heavy rainstorms early Monday pnbllc address of Clifford M% &<£»“? JffJS tSTsJdrt Walker after his Inauguration asl Rl(lwoo4 F .| la 6 . 62 inches foil. At gbvernor of Georgia and It wilt bo l If tie Falla 2,25 was recorded. after Chief Bells.a returned from the Police Department, It la sale Buffalo, N. Y. COMMISSION TIPPED OFF” The charges agalaat the vhlef and the other men were filed by the Commlaalon after ar. Investlga-, ute.’ Athena* beautiful thorough! *111 ho.decorated like the FT boulevards with “vlngt blanc” and The first work of the senate will be the election of a president, an office for which three aspirants „ , . .... are In the field: George II. Csrs- Only one cane of typhoid fever I well, formerly a house leader from has Iwen reported In Clarke county I Wilkinson county; Howard Coates. «o far this aummer as against 0 f Pulaski county, also a former forty or more at this time in 1921 member of the house, and W. C. it was learned Tuesday at the of- Mundy, a successful attorney from lice of Dr. J. D. Applewhite, Dodge county. Mr. Milner has held) tlon brought about by a "Up” to health commissioner. , I the off ice heretofore. lone of Its members. The Itlp," Thc remarkable decrease in ty- | Not until the inauguration of however, did not come from within phoid cases Is a result of the in- Governor Walker will the assembly the Police Department, it la aald. ' In »ng of 1922 tSX were installed and the cut in ty- ments m record time, so that the JJf ,, ^ >nd phoid cases waa noticed imme- house may begin active • legislative rtillng to report It to the Com- diately, the total tor that summer work oh the Monday following'the mission. W1<i ,„.. v - - being far below that of the prev . governor's inauguration. ( The chief stated he drank wtls. additional color to the scene. iou» summer. I As heretofore, the personnel of key while, on the convention trlpi promenadin* alone the Athena lil 1U21 thirteen dwl Min hntun Pnmmitlnn nn WBVl tlnd I ...I li-a.- .t.i.hl«. s* I. • . . . * . .. “ . . . ... from typhoid fever In * r whereas not one ist disease has been reported far this year. Dr A) riven three doses vaccine to 14209 people • Not one esse of smallpox ha. de- tees. dance of a friend"tscsral block. .eloped in Clarke sinco Inst year. The waya and means committee, away. The policemen on«*ed, find’ A total of 1.017 people have been charged with devising ways *nd , their sunerlor officer drunk. thU dl,C “ M ".ST J.°l i**** 0 * the _revenues W «£& f.r this year. _ ,w th which to msTnUIn the state, • home where He remained for two »r more. The Mend fln.11> Delegates. “fourth ,7 t6 be FEATURE DAY Entertainment Program For Fourth Best Ever Held in Athens,' Several Bands Herd. The call sent out by the Allan | R. Fleming post of tha American:President Hardin O’ Is Legion for places in private home*! a ru 1 n £ 18 for delogates and vlaltore Indicates Against Government Na- tionalizing Coal Opera tions, He Says. 4 largo number of hou.es. barn. » *• Jff lid other farm buildings were do. be J£ e ?JJ^rfiPKS -HI“lL ss'JfShJH . “ STSSmSuS the^North 1 Dakota’stornT '>«» and aome splendid round of the North Da sola storm. I amusement ere to be offered the forest rnmiMF .. ii -in MONMOUTH.-Roy Mesra.eec-1POKIIC gathering here for the dey. Tli“on baseman for the 8tronghurst a... f„n„»ioo his imiiiriinn mm ^ WM kll ,. d hy , bolt) BASEBALL AND of lightning, and three others were i FIREWORKS knocked unconscious In the firth , Governor Walker will epeak In i i m: i n . 0 f tho Strongheiwst-Mc | In addition to the address ot Athens on July 4 nod hundreds ol i Mccomb game et Stronghurst III. | Governor Clifford Walker, which Georgia boys, hero to httond the i -n,, lightning plcrcod the second | will be free to everybody there big three dey’e convention of the I baseman’d body. Oscnr Croaton, the "’ ’ 1 * **” state American Legion .of wblchjcug,,^ n (f cecond base; Umpire •Rodney Cohen ,of Augneta la 6••' Clarence Havmuist and Pitcher nartment commander, will hoar, Oscar Dillon, ot Stronghurat, were him. i injured. In addition to the mddreoa of) Governor Welker the Athena com-1 SWEEP WE8TFRN mlttee for tha Allen R. Fleming. NRW YORK Jr., poet, headed by Frank O.l Miller, chairmen, has onrilned al. (»r aswh>i,*«i splendid entertainment program 1 1 ROCHESTER.—Western New with "something doing every min-1 York was c"* aiming away the deb- is Tuesday following one of the •rat wind and ra.' storms In it’s (hat the largeat crowd that haa ever attended n Legion convention in the atate wHI be here end the local Legionnaires fear that with the crowded condltlona caused by the general travel and the summer CHEYENNE*—In a discussion school’ that It will be necessary to here of the nation*, coal problem use rooms In private homes end hi which he mentioned the Indua- ~ try, the consuming public and tho gorsrament'a interest In all phaaea of coal operations, President Hard ho damage le expelled to reach penile died the house committee on ways andlind returned homo drinking. It I*! boulevards Is destined to bocoml Clafkecoun- means, appropria tions and rules I officially reported. Sunday mom- „ famous as that attractive sport death from .will be awaited with much interest j| n g, June 17. about five o'clock the „„ t j, e , lre otB of Day Peres. Some reported so since these committees will have e | chief telephoned to tho police Ipplewhito has hhr. Part In ahaping the course of headquarters and asked Policemen •f antl-typhojd legation. The Clarke legislator. Mooro tnd ^rnellMn to como ;o >|e,this jrear. ^ |WHl probably be on these commit- home and Inks him to tha real- mm ESCIPE is Sa?5aSaOTi»«reIsa than heretofore. - l The c *P»i n obeyed and reported The appropriation, committee. “>• «U*ra condition lr> hla Immedl- . holding aa it does the purse strings Iaup«rior, Actlnf; Olaf Charley I of the state, will be scarcely leu Seagrevoa. (occupied than the wayi and means J P Thornton Has Close Call When Car Bums on increased »ppropriationa V *** Mitchell’s Bridge Road.f^'^ionTth." Monday. I priatloni measure will en attention in ap- J- P. Thornton of Spartanburg, S. C„ traveling insuranco repre- •entative, was forced to jump from • burning automobile on the Mitc|i- .11 bridge road Monday afterdoon while the cor ran off the road and w«» practically totally destroyed by the flames. Mr. Thornton wa* coming to- MEET! MONDAY MADE NO REPORT Policemen Conn 'iron and Moore never did maks k report and the Acting Chief also failed to report to hla supe' nr, tho Commission. A week elapsed during which time the chief did not report for duty from his convention trip. Saturday. June 33, the Commlulon obtained . Information of tha chiefs condl- American OldsmobUa* touring, on fire.' He W. DaVlS Spoke. Social flammed 1 On the brakes and fenr- Del i Khtfu I. Inpr an exploaion of the gasoline t*nk jumped and let the car take »ts own way. The auto ran off the roed end ine flamed consumed about all of fne parts Jhat would bum and later it was towed to Athens. Moving Pictures Help Educate Foreigners Here COTfaBMsd Proas.) c 11 (CAGQff Educating foreigners tiy use or the'motion picture is be* adopted more and more each 4a y and has served to cause deep thought on tho part of the )edaiag Mr tucatom and Immigration authori ties of this country, according to Jaroslav J. Zmrhrl, district school B,| perintendont of Chicago, in a statement made to the Society tor VIkusI Education ten, "There has been a noticeable in- fr *‘ane In the attendance at our nixht classes and lectures on dt- tzenshop since mation pictures ^■ve been available, dec*ared Mr. ZmrhaL “The man found me screen •nswertag fhelr quewtlonr l* * way J!»eyi t could easily 6 s-mnidrataad/ blsrly delighted with lesions In Wciure.*language. “Popalclo** Joints alongside of tha Into the hundreds of '.honaanda. streets, with chic, pretty and viva- j Farm lands were hit herd by the clous southern girls attending the storm, many crop, being rained by University Summer School, to lend the wind and pelting rain. No lives were reported lost, though a chick i,*i not yet been completed. A Severe o'ccirtcal storm cen tered about b, ffalo where several fires were started hy lightning. The Coast anard at Summerville. Lake i Ontario, rescued three men and three worn n from a yacht, which was a victim ot the seventy mile wlnda. on tha streets of Osy fifteen hundred of Georgia's cremo ala creme will be In attendance nt the Summer School, and will Join in entertaining the yopug vets who are hen for the convention. Athena girls are also "on their toee" and will make the visiting Legionnaires at home. It's going to he a great time for the ex- service men of Georgia If tbay can stand the atranaouaness of—“some, thing doing evsry minute." Doctors Urged To Take Lead In Health Move SAN FRANCISCO. — The de- demand for Individual and com munity health protection is cver- whelmius, Dr. Walter M. Dickie of Sacramento, told the child spccial- Iclne’at Scfr^seaslona^’wiof 'the : of orphans and refugees. Hla meet- inionuBuon vi «.» «m«.- American Medical AMoeiation lag with the;^ n ® h n *^*J*L^ tlon and Monday tba charge* were Ihere. “Its development hu fol- a dlgUnbUy AweriOMjtouch to th preferred. ‘lowed a natural course, receiving ceremony. In the presence or tne Chief Seagravct* suspension lt» Inception in the war draft and entire American colony the two Henry J. Allen .Welcomes New Syrian Leader f*v As-oei.'sd Prssa.1 BEYROUTH.—The former gov ernor of an American state greet ed the new governor ot a French •tats In Beyrouth recently when General Waygsnd arrived to as sume the reigns of government ol Syria, and was welcomed by form er governor Henry J. Allen of Kan. Mr. Allen has been here on e lour of Investigation for the. Near East Relief to study the problems iV j inception ... mr . our men while under arms” he said) governors recalled with sympathy “Pnbllc opinion la strongly en-1 the wrrk of the American Relief, trenched behind the movement and, j n> t before Greeting General scientific medicine must take the ; Weygand, Mr. Allen watched the leadership in fullfilling the de-1 „ n try Into the town of n hundred mand.*> ' blind children who bad been Dr. Henry Boswell, of Sanalp- bronaht by the American Relief imnn. a areaier Dare oi is., rn,m Mitsissaippl told how th# t breach » perilous Journey of TOO u ? n ”* : '*™:r medical ppofMilon could coppers te overmonnlalna and desert of- j *“ ,n - In continuing the discussion Dr. roiSVC-ras John M. Dodson, oecratary of th# P. T. A. Short Course . wm Be{r j n Mon d a y Chief Seagram* imspenslon dates from Monday and tba suspen sion of Policeman Moon and cor- neliaon dates from Tuesday night They are. night doty men. ' Captain T. A. Hart waa ordered to act aa chlsf daring the suspen sion of Chlsf Benses. During a. greater part of last Athens Masons enjoyed one the most enthusiastic meeting, (n. , ■ _ - the history of the lodpe *t the j£ a 111* O A <1 S Ol Tcm?lv Jondny night , Tho meeting was characterued by the “know one another spirit irhich prevailed. Two insoiring ad- • dresses were deliverer*, one by ‘Attorney General George M. Na- nicr, past’grand master rf Georgia Ms*oas. and Mrs. Phil W* Davjs of Lexington, fcsst grind wo Hilt ma- large audience with tneir sddreM- eSft'asf'.iraWMSf Mrs. Sidney P. Reaves. * > The entertainment features were splendid including a solo by Miss Ladle Kinncbrew. After the addresses were deliv ered the social session won held it which time refreshments were served by the Eastern S.:t.*. The purpose of the meeting was to obeerve the ceremony of St John the Baptist W. F. Dorsey was master of ceremonies. The invocation was made by Bev. George E. Stone, chaplain, and Oscar Kinnebrew, worshipful ter of Mt. Vernon Lodge g«va •- • —*- The mteting was • Ices of the Ht oandere. K- T., and Salonia Chap- China Suffer From War Costs fRv Associated Press.) PEKING.—Chins has hor dvll war to thank for a net decrease of $331,644 (Chinese currency, In op erating revdSue from bar govern- _.J| IFJ>iiJ dtaSolw th* WMF merit railways’ during the year (Sided in November. 19.13. In spite of the fact that eleven lines showed ’Increases ringing from 1334 90 to tl1'.«34, the dls. niptlon of traffic and nppronrin. tlon of revenues by the military governors has turned tho balance so that the yore's operation show ed a loss. The .*aklng-<Mahden line which, to the north ot Shanhal- kwan, haa been under the control of General Chang fu-lln since he established the Independence of the churls a year ago accounted for three Eastern Provinces In Man- 3992348 ot 4bo deOcft (General Wu Pollfu's operations on the line Of the Poklng.Ifsnkow railway ceased a loss or $139,601 In reve nue from that line, i'he total reve nue for the year received by the government was 37,987,369, - council on Health and Pnbllc fn- cti action of the A meric m Medi cal Association, said that the suc cessful plan must seek the best In terest of the public. He pointed out that public health work is with out the cooperation of the general practioner and urged family reaoe of physicians to git* more sttcr.'loa , In op-1 to preventive medicine. — - ■ ‘ expert* The child specialists and considered rhethods of Iciwarkig the msnlity of infants in tins country. Special emphasis was laid by Arthur B. Spalding, of San Francisco, on tha relal’on of veneral disease and other infect ions of the mother to deaths in Infancy. It was pointed out that proper care of the mother before the child is born will prevent many of these deaths. Dr. John A. Foote, of Washing ton. D. C., stated hi*i belief that statistics' give only an approxi mate ides of the influence which birth injuries end hemorrhagic dls eases have on infant death, and Top much emphasis cannot he placed upon the vsluo of tho un usual opportunity that la open to the ms!hero ■"<* teachers of Ath ena sad the state through the coo- tesy of the University of Oeortta. The Short Course to Parents and Tenet-era herlnnlog Moodey. July second, In #9ai*P H«1 Wj* csmiUii. will bo under Uu_ personal direction of the national tlcld sec retary. Mrs. Wingfield Csrherry. and ho» the distinction ot being one of only six such courses In the United States sponsored by tne National Association. The presence of Mrs. Jones, the state president, and other women promtaent In the state P. T. A. work, as well as the drills In parliamentary practice of. fered by Dr. Stewart, will be ad ditional factors Inauring the one- cess of tho venture. Tuesday’s lecture will be a con cases nave on imam ueaiu. ju»u • - - urged more careful examination of slderatlon of **i«wo^ tfone the trdics of infants djring from hy tho Parent-Teacher su«h rallies in or.for to rfct**nni:i»' *'• ’ ! ‘ ' ' . , methods'of preveiitiohl Only with of ..the five departments: healh, stock, to parchaso thorn with toe s knowledge of the cause can pre- education, homo .service, public money obtained from sale of the welfare, ency. organization and will bo a baseball gams and day light fireworks on Sanford Field In the afternoon, followed by a torch light procession that night Tiie emnoements on Sanford Field will carry the usual admis sion fen but the torchlight proces sion will he free and In addition to this feature there will be many others incidental to the convention that tho public will enjoy. At least four hands will be hero and these win keep a tune going nil tho while. Tho famous hand from Fort Henning will bo here with the Co lumbus post while the Atlanta Number one post Is sending n band. Gainesville Is sending a band and a drum corps ami Savannah, who Is making n strong bid for the nett convention, will-vary probably hero a band to head tha targe delegation from that place. There Is bnt little advance dis cussion over politics of the oon vontlon. But few Legionnaires are being mentioned na successors to Commander Rodney' Cohen. Cap tain Edgar B. Dunlap of Galnea- vllle was a candidate last year and hla hat may ba cast In the ring again this year. H* i» one of the prominent men of the Legion forces In tha stats and ta certel" to have a Urge following. MaJo. Fonvllie McWhorter of Atlanta haa also been mentioned aa a probe, ble candidate aa haa Captain Coorto "Kid" Woodruff of Colnm. The convention convenes hero next Tuesday and continues for three days. lug recorded himself os being op posed to "nationalising the mines," and declared that tha United States coal commission would bring the country "a new under- unions, emerging from moss meet ings hero early Tuesday morning met and threatened to clash physi cally. Three thousand girl operaton were kept moving by tho spepial details of polico who were sent out on strike duty. In Providence tho strike was practically one hundred per iVnt effective, according to union lead ers. In Springfield, operators wero hissed by tho picketing girls,! a« SAFES AT MARKET The iMtgt wage now paid fa twenty dollars a week with the nominal eight hour day. The striking girls are demanding a seven hour day with increases in ages ranging from five to nine dlars a week more. The New England Telephone and * Telegraph Company which an nounced Monday that operator* re maining at work would receive the special emergency pay of aix d 0 |- J| tM _ sasauvro- ^ ars n wc *k» ^ addition to their SSEUflt order” Tuesday, ^ „„hSnLu" ".causa "so many of tho operators vital public Interest have protestcu against accepting The chief executive spoke from , ny c ‘ Ilrn p nymon t, f or maintain- the observation platform of the car inK pub H c service. The strike haa lo which bo camo here from Den- its chief atrongth in the larger vor to hla first Wyoming audience, (cities, and is causing a great deal Ho also mentioned the problems of inconvenience! to patrons of the of tho livestock producers of tho company, state, tba wool Interests and callod attonlion to relief measures which ho said congress and the war fin-, anco corporation had given aftor war'* Inflation and later deflation. Tho biggest need of tho world today, tho president said, was work, adding that tho world has no use for a loafer, big or lltth "whether commanding capital or directing labor." I ' —-— dovcioping his principal i Twelve People Have Died theme, tho coal problem, Mr. Itard- * — — lug referred lo tlio striko of last year, assorting his opinion that many lino oporators wore as much responsible for that sltuaUin as the men who struck. Referring to the coal situation i ,, —, ■ , — at another point In hla remarks, IjSnSSTl It M "A taw B y*o.ra ld ;ro on. of tou JSSSCo’Lf Wyoming SSUT&&Z J * D ’ ^l-whlte. T.B. From Malady in Clarke County Since January 1st This Year. Twelve people have died from touadlng statement that your atatg alone contained, enough coal lo supply the entire land with fuel for four centuries to come. Wheth er tho statement waa extravagant or not. It was at least an Intlmatloh of jroor mineral resources of which the natl m at largo never dreamed. "How Incomprehensible, Indeed, are your limitless possibilities and yon are but one of many states of seemingly Incomparable material richei. Let us hope that tho genius of statesmen and the common senao of business may be com bined to solve tha problems of transportation and distribution so that your wealth may be made an asset to tho nation aa well as to the state." lour new cases of tuberculosis were reported in Msy and four pcoplo died with the malady. Mrs. A. N. Dowers, who has been en gaged na temporary tuberculosis nurse by the Clarke County Anti- Tnbercuosla Association, is giving part time to this work and with Dr. Applowhito has been making examination of people with tuber culosis tendencies. Sinco Mrs. Bowers assumed her duties sixty-five persons have been examined by D». Applewhite for tuberculosis. A full tin i nurse has been employed to begin work on September 1st, it Is stated- SOOV OF BURGESS IS FOUND IN CREEK; HUNTER ARRESTED McCAYSVILLE. Oe.—The body of Rucker Burgess was taken from ~‘iwn creek, about two t of here, early Monday Mrs. W. A. Andrews Sells $40 Worth Each Month Since Opening. Others Pleased With Success. A string of conveyances itretch- tag from Lumpkin street to the entrance of the University of Georgia .greeted patrons of the ccrb Market Tuesday morning and, as usual, wise were very brisk. The Oconee County Community truck sold $45 worth of choice produce. Tho Madison county com - munlty truck will be here agai- Thureday. This track - came last thursday bat arrived too tate. W. p. Bowling of, AcnoldsvUlu sold nine Poland China pigs last tatnrdsy from s thoroughbred ■liberator strain. Jie will bring more and some Du roc Jerseys will also be brought to the IMarket at $5.90 each. W- Andrews has been bringing produco to the market since It opened May 6 and haa net ted 940 per month each month while here husband haa been en abled to remain on hla farm rod manage the crepe. Mrs. Andrews as well os scores of others are enntlnnhlly praising tha - Curb Market. Mrs. Bessie Troutman, market master, stated Tuesday aha had not received all of the one hundred old roosters to fill the order given her recently. TH* old cooeters will bring twelve cecte 'per pound and enable those desiring thoroughbrel LYNCHINQS CUT FROM 33 TO . „ 11 DURINQ SIX MONTHS. FlKhtlngtOwn NEW YORK.—Lynch tags in thoi™ 11 ?" "Oit o . United Slates during tho first B | x I nlghl, anil Luther Hunter Is under months of 1933 dropped to 11. as nrrc " t ln connection with hie d«atb. somo of tho authorities femrlag foul play. Inrly In the afternoon. It te clalmi'it, Burgees and Hunter left their boarding house to go up the creek lit enarch of whiskey, but It was on tho return trip that Bur gess lost hla life. When Burgees got home ho tried to get two men to go with him In search of Bur- compared with 33 tor the satr.u period lu 1933. tho National a»- I aoclatlon for tho advancement of *'• colored people announced today. clali I Tho decreaso was attributed lo *hel agitation for a federal antl-lynch- Ing law, to tho northward migra tion of negroes, and the aubaeqnont desire to retain negro labor In tho aoutb. Florida had three lynchlngs, Georgia two, and Arkansas, Ala- gess, who ho claimed sat down to bama, Louisiana, Mlaalsslppl. Mia souria and Texas, one each, the as. sodatton said. THREE 8AVANAH BOYS ON LEVIATHAN CREW Savannah, Qa.—Georgia waa rep resented on the crew ot the Levia than on her record-making trip, It here. Three Sann- rest about two miles up the creek, liut the men refused. About two hours later, however, eome persons did go and foundi the body of Burgess In tho oreek, with foot prints on tho hank that, they rlalmcd, wi re suspicious and led to the arrest of Hunter. Taenty years ago. about 390 , "U I yards from this scene, Burgles nah youths are In service on the filled Virgil Queen, but was treed big boat: Pope Freeman, Paul, became ho waa In hla own heme Kehoe and George Taylor, Jr. 1 and was a boy in his teens. old roosters. Thursday aiarket Day. Monday’s Banner-Herald With Good Grape Coupon Missing Will Be Redeemed; Bring Paper to Office and Receive A Free Drink. The Banner-Herald has received a number of complaints frortf subscribers to the effect that the coupon In the Budwlne Bottling Company’s advertisement In Monday’s papsr, good for a bottle of “Good Grape” had been torn out before the paper waa delivered.** The papers were complete when turned over to the carrfer boys, who apparently clipped out at many coupons as they wanted after leaving for their routes, resulting In some subscribers re ceiving papers with the coupon missing. The Banner-Herald has no way of ascertaining just how many papers were thus delivered, but we have arranged to keep a supply of “Good Grape” on hand at this office from Wednesday through Friday and any subscriber bringing or sending to the offloe a. Monday paper, which was delivered to them with the coupon mfss ing, will be given a bottle of this delicious beverage freo of charff# The manage ment regrets this occurrence and trusts subtefilHkig'. | will understand the manner in which It occurred. - «»•*.’!