Newspaper Page Text
^/teUlour n’Moitf,
a doubt” *&£
‘The Man Without A Country’
See Him At the
STRAND THEATRE
Wednesday ■ Thursday
The American Legion Presents
ARNOLD DALY —Greatest
Character Actor of All Time—
in this Rig Picture.
War—Romance—Love—
Happiness.
Thrilling
Admission: Adults 35c
Children 10c.
11 A. M. tb 11 P. M.
• Continuous
Wednesday-Thursday
July 4-5
MSB IIQHT
jgg agggggggm mm. nnwamt
" ’ J T M» half^^SISPlSRBSe Of 'the
! 10,750.000 about discounted. jmltted that at the time he did nor orchard*. Mr. Yeoman* did not so
I The Liverpool cotton exchange will know the youth had relatives. (state, but a gentleman who is post,
tau! dan extra noaston Monday even- Ixwiufry Into the records of the ed nays his Income from his trees
„ . . ■, state hoard of health by the legls. ls a bont *40,000 a year. I saw the
uik irom o.u p. m. i<> i.u p. ni. to lators showed no burial permit for'ci--* —.*....1 «..* « r* u-
I receive the government report. I Tabert had been recorded and the
I After the bureau report is digested j stat ,, h a< j no other official record
jweather renditions. especially in f w f j.| a death. The hoard of state
CALCIUM ARSENATE
15V2C a pound
This in the product recornmnulnl by the Government t<>
the boll weevil. ILSK IT ami you can t K „ wrong, om pric- |«
Bible ItecuuMe of a most fortunate pun-ha**-. You will NKVKi:
CALCIUM ARKEXATE any lower tlian this. order No\V.
Price W/ 2 C a pound. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
K. O. 11. any p»int in <le«.rgla.
NO OROERS ACCEPTED FOR LESS THAN 2,000 LBS.
G. L. Hemminger
Market Gossip
Received Over F. J.
Linncll & Company’s
Private Wire
lators showed no burial permit for • firnt orchard set out near Cornelia
~ ~ some of the trees being 35 years
old.
NOTICE THIS LIST!
PEDIGREED USED CARS
Late Model Dodge Tour ing Good Dodge Truck
iBuJck Touring, good running shup**
♦ Two high class, repainted UuiiU Touring Cars. Good <’o
jpA* s ngor touring.
CONOLLY MOTOR COMPANY
HERALD WANT ADS.
Too Lato to Classify
rn. New J Wednesday, Juty 4th,
of 69. play, w ill be a general holiday and all
bout s (American market** will be closed,
yield _
'good as could bo expected and li
ter than usual at this time of th
year, between seasons the vacation
period and with
ployed at high wages the purchasing
power of the public Is good which
s|>eukH well of the futur*
dlcal examiners was then re-
| quested to investigate Dr. Jones’
{record.
Inasmuch as state witnesses
have testified Tabert received
more than fifty licks wdth a seven
arxl one.half pound strap, which a
medical expert testifying for the
state said was sufficient to produce
death, counsel declared that if Dr.
Jones is placed on the stand he
will he given a grilling when ten
dered for cross examination. Dr.
Jones In answer to a hypothetical
question propounded by the legls-
Here is real economyL-a 24-pound
bag of MERRY WIDOW FLOUR
makes more than 900 biscuits.
They are regular size biscuits too—
2 Vi inches in diameter and about one
inch thick.
MERRY WIDOW Self-Rising Flour
contains just the right amount of
pure ingredients; so that you can
make delicious biscuits almost as
easily and quickly as you can slice
bread. All you have to do is add
milk or cold water and shortening;
then bake.
One Bag of Flour
MERRY WIDOW Self-Rising Flour
is made by the Ford Flour Com
pany, millers since 1895, ,the origi
nators of self-rising flour, hi spite
of the many imitations, it is holding
its old friends and making new ones
every day. Here’s the proof—over
600,000more bags of MERRY WIDOW
were used in 1922 than in 1920.
Try it. You will never change.
Ask for it by name.
Ford Flotlr Co.; Nashville; Tenn.
’ *
Note to Dernier,! It toot Jobber doesn’t handle
MERRY WIDOW Sett-Rising Flour, write Ul (or
. nana ot Jobber nearest yon who does.
THE ORIGINAL
Self-Rising Flour
ATHENS COTTON
The local cotton market closed
it the same level as the previous
lose of Saturday. 27 cents.
NEW YORK COTTON
Open High Low Close P.C.
an 23.60 23.60 23.10 23.37 23.6*
Uly •• .. 27.10 27.10 20.35 26.58 27.01
>rt 24.55 24.05 24.S3 24.14 24.57
>er 23.98 23.38 23.30 23.59 24.03
II A. M. liitls: January 23.50; July
1.67; October 24.35; December 23.
It takes unceasing work to keep
up an apple orchard, and one must
be at a heavy expense for several
years until the trees begin to bear.
From the time an apple twig is
set out the work starts on shaping
its growth. Each tree miust be
fertilized every spring, the bodies
painted, the dirt around the trunk
removed, and insects destroyed by
an application of certain ingredi
ents, then the limbs kept trimmed
and shaped, tbft entire orchard dur
ing several months sprayed every
ten days, and at this season each
bearing tree gone over and the
lative investigating committee said - young apple crop thinned 1 out so
5/» iirk« with a afran wan fuifflrip.nt a8 to g row large and perfect fruit
But growing apple* beat* cotton
for it is very rare to have a com
plete failure of the crop.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
Open High Low Close P.C.
Jan 23.18 23.19 22.25 23.10 23.38
July .. .. 23.30 27.30 26.47 26.70 27.13
Oct 23.90 23.90 23.13 23.42 23.86
Dec 23.48 23.48 22.79 23.06 23.47
11 A. M. Illds; January 23.16; July
U7.00; October 23.65; December 23.28.
LIBERTY BONDS
Open P. C.
$ 1 -2s 100.18 100.15
First 4 1 -4s 98.3 98.13
nil 4 I-4s M.K 98.4
Third 4 1 -4s 98.15 98.K
Fourth 4 l-4s 98.0 98.4
„ry 99.16 99.17
NEW YORK STOCKS
Operi 1 r.w. P.C.
Coca Cola 75% 76% 75%
Kennlcott Copper 32 32% 32
U. H. Steel 90% 90% 90%
Fan American .. 59% 58 60%
Amc. Tel. Tel. .. 119% 120% 119%
tT. Sugar 67
Southern fly 31% 32% 31%
Ixk’W's Inc 15%
.CHICAGO GRAIN
Open. P.C.
WHEAT—*
Sept 103% 103%
Doc 109% 106
July 103% 102%
CORN—
Sept ' 75% 75%
aw
July Is W-
OAT9-
8.|»t S8* M#
3a-4 3S-4
July ao*4 40-4
ATHENS CURB MARKET
BULLETIN S,
Doan,, string, 30 cent, tallon.
fleets, 10 cent* bunch.
Dewberries, 10 cents quart.
Huckleberries, 20 cents quart.
Strawberries, 20 cents quart.
Cabbage, 5 cents head.
Chickens, friers, 35 cents pound.
Hens, 20 cents a pound.
Roosters. 13 cents a pound.
Cucumbers, 8 cents pound.
Carrots, 10 cents a bunch.
Hum, home cured, 25 cents a pound.
Lard, home made. 16 cents pound,
lettuce, 5 and 10 cents head.
Onions, 5 and 10 cents a bunch.
Peas, English. 20 cents a gallon.
Potatoes, Irish, 3% cents pound.
Potatoes, sweet, 25 cents, a peck.
Okra, 18 cents pound.
Corn, 35 and 50 cents doxen.
ltuttorbenns, 30 cents gallon.
Cucumbers, 8 cents pound.
Apples, 30 cents gallon.
Higginbotham
Trial Expected
To End Thursday
50 licks with a strap was sufficient
to kill a normal matt, according to
legislative records.
Tho state closed Its case Friday
after introducing evidence tending
tfi show Tabert received from 50
to 119 licks. Saturday the defense-
presented* testimony tending to Im
peach these witnesses. Several
witnesses testified that the charac
ters of J. W. Jackson. J. M. Tysom
Walter Lyles and Graham Ward
were bad and that they could not
be believed on oath. •
Georgias’ Apple
Orchards Praised
(Continued From Pag* On*)
Mrs. J.W. Tate Gains
25 lbs. Taking Tanlac
“Tanlac is like a guardian foi
my health and I never expect tf
be without a bottle in the house,”
recently said rs. James W. fcTaW,*
residing at 1502 Maple St., Rome
Ga.
“I had hardly known a day free
of suffering In ten years. I fWdt
either In misery \vlth‘ my stomach
or kidneys, or a hacking Cough
nearly ever minute. Finally I got
to where* I could ent scarcely arty
store would completely exhaust
me.
“Tanlac has relieved me of every
trouble, and built me up to my
(formal freight besides. If lt &ad
not been my own experience I could
not believe it. I just can't say toe
much in praise of Tanlac. 1
Tanlac is for sal* by all good
druggists. Accept no substitute
Over 37 million bottles sold.
Tanlac Vegetable are Nn.
thing except a little sweet milk. ' tures own rem edy fpr constipatlo
lost twenty-five pounds and go J < For ' sdle every wher$,—-Advertise
so weak the short walk to th<^m«n.L( * ."-ilui
(Continued from pag* one)
27, 1822, that ho died four days
later.
The defense la silent on the line
of evidence it Intends to introduce
during the next two days with the
exception it will conlnuo to at
tempt to ftnpeach state witnesses.
No denial would be made, defense
counsel said, that Tabert was whip
ped by Higginbotham, but testi
mony will be adduced from several
eye-witnesses tending to show the
whipping was ”wKhin-the-law."
prison regulations at tho time ot
the whipping, the defense pointed
out, prescribed ten licks could be
administered to a convict for in
fraction of rules. Corporal punish
ment since has been abandoned in
Florida, the last state general ns
snmhly approving Ita Inquiry into
the death of Tabert.
The defenao said it hod witness
es who will testify that Tabert was
flfven onlv ten llcka by Higgin
botham, while the defendant, him
self, fa expected* to take the stand
and relate liow he contends he was
forced to whip Tabert after the
Dakotan had been reported by ids
guard three times for failing to
work.
T. Capers Jones, Putnam
Lumber company’s camp pavsidan.
is expected to testify that Tabert’s
death was due to pneumonia with
ft social disease complication. That
he examined Tabert’s body and
round no signs of lash bruises, not
did the Dakotan make any men
tion of It.
The camp physician was one of
he principal, witnesses appearing
>efore the leglsT-D'-e investigating
nmmlttee. He told the investiga
tes nnpuTOonla wua the prhnnrri
•ausa of death, with A social trfs-f
>ase complication. He declared he
nado the latter to read malaria on
a hurfal permit In order not to
embarrass Tabert’s family, but ad-
is a slow growing tree and while it
will yield a small crop of fruit the
sixth year, trees must be ten years
old before a paying return is had.
But when the trees begin to bear
ach year the crop increases, and
healthy and bearing npplo trees are
known to live a hundred years or
more. Single trees have been
knou'n to produce 34 bushels and
one grower near Cornelia claims
lo have gathered 64 bushels from a
tree. With 48 trees to the acre,
one can foriti some Idea of tho in-
cleastng value of an apple orchard.
Apples last C'ason brought at the
packing house $1.25 per bushel for
No. 2. and $2.25 per bushel for
No. 1 fruit Apples, like every other
commodity, has their price regu
lated by supply and demand. Tfie
crop this year will not average
much over half. Some trees are
laden and others are bare or with
a light crop.
GROWERS ARE
ORGANISED
The apple growers of Habersham
are organized like the fruit men
of California, and they sell through
regular buyorn. In the Cornelia
section they have six packing
plants at convenient points, to
to which the members of the as
sociation all send their fruit,
nominal charge of ten cents per
box Is mado for sorting, polished
and crating apples. This work is
all done by machinery and Jt costs
about $15,000 to establish a first-
class packing plant About 85 per
Cent of the apples are marketable,
and the others are “culls.” and
these are what tho mountain wag
ons bring to Athens In tho winter
and sell for a dollar a bushel
Nothing has yet been done toward
working the "windfalls” and
'culls”, but iMJr. Davison says he
contemplates establishing on his
Turnervlllo farm nn evaporating
plant to utilize them. He hns now
a cider mill and will make such
apples Into vinegar.
LARGEST NEAR
CORNELIA
I visited several orchards, but
the largest was near Cornelia, be
longing to T. J. Yeoman, of Daw
son. Gh.’Mr. Yeomans has 35,000
bearing peach trees and 260 acres
in apples. Most of h/n trees are 18
years old and his orchards are kept
in fine condition. Mr. D. Moody,
Iceberg Lettuce
Ripe Tomatoes
Plenty Ripe Cantaloupes
Fancy Lemons
Fancy Noo-Name Orange
Pekoe Tea
PIGGLY-WIGGLY
BIG TENT
TONIGHT 8:15
What Is the
SOUL?
Find Out Tonight
Thornton’s
TUESDAY
- Dinner 50c
Vegetable Soup
/ Log of Veal anil Dressing
Green Cabbage
New Irish Potatoes
Fried Squash
Macaroni and Cheese
Muffins and Biscuits
Cocoanut Custard
Coffee, Tea or Milk
50 Cents
Supper 50c
Pork Chops
Hominy Grits
American Fried Potatoes
Vegetable Salad
Scalloped Tomatoes
Hot Biscuit
Fruit Pudding
•Coffee, Tea or
50 Cents
COME TO ATHENS
JULY 3-4
AMERICAN LEGION
CELEBRATION
WE INVITE YOU
. When you come to Athens July 3-4 you will find the most cor
dial welcome at this store in addition to a complete line of farm
implements, tools and machine parts.
Pay our Harness Department and Factory on the second floor
a visit—you’ll be surprised at finding an Athens’ factory of this
magnitude.
GRIFFETH IMPLEMENT COMPANY
Broad Street Athens, Georgia
Welcome
State
Convention
Georgia
American
Legion
Athens
Legionnaires
Convention
Legion
Auxiliary
July 34
I
' '
Raise the Flag of Independence
On Your Own Grounds
JNSURE yourself and family a home—buy one or build ona—
.then keep it “insured.”
We have a number of very desirable homes in Athens and some
farm homes near the city for sale at prices that can’t remains
present figures and terms long.
We also have many desirable vacant residence lots and business
property listed at bargain prices. A purchaes now means a
splendid investment. ' L. - • -
We Write Insurance and Deal in Real Estate.
We Offer You Splendid Investment Inducements.
Come in and let us talk over the matter with you if you
plate buying or selling.
GUARANTY TRUST
"Clyvtnri SfroAf: 1...