Newspaper Page Text
V:
PAGB
OLD HOME TOWN
7*\irtS I'ftlmR I
AutS koV»&
CHINA EGGS
CRASS SEIO
PER
HOME
75RUNO!
I MARRIED
ONE OF THEM ^
HOME HAIR. COTTER!
i THIRTY YEARSy^
V, AGO;^—■/
JTHERE3
'PRACTICALLY'
NO WEAR OUT,
VTO 'EM'.! J
(TOO SAY \
UTS TH' l
GREATEST
invention
IN TWENTY 1
l YEARS? y
ITS A MACHINE
TO CUT HAIR
WITHOUT
LINdr „ ’
KNICKINfir ,
YOUR EARS'
HAUK BENTON RETURNED FROM THE CITY - - ,,3E:
WHERE HE, INVESTIGATED A PATENT DEVICE
FOR CUTT/NG YOUfe OWN HA'R AT HOME
UnLlE IRVMIN IS GOlKlCr V
TO STAN A WMOLE WEEK ]
ELLIS ANO IM CiOINCrTO J
LET HIM SLEEP WITH YOU.
WONT THAT BE DANDY f/
r hello-yeh-oh- Y
is-nun* you maTor?
vJiiat? — you're' v
\\. RIGHT— UOTWiUG
H APPENED TO You —
WELL SAY, HOW ABOUT
-TH' RACES? - WHAT?.
HELLO — HELLO
HELLO CEUTRaC. - DID
YOU CUT ME OFF?-,
. HoH-Trt' PaptiV
\ Huue up?—oH«/
^heck-win
'DlDlJfTY'LET' ME \
auswerth’ ear
WARHER?- IKUEW
rr VIAS-TU’ MATOR
CALLlUG - I'D A
told Hiw a uue
TMlfTWOULD KllOCt*
ULLtU'SPARROWS
Y off -nv wire! /
'HAToR?- I wisrt
I AUSWEREDTMaT
CALL-WHeU ]
got -through
TALKlUG TO Him
He’d a backed
AWAY from TH’
\ rHoUE UrtH A
\ cauliflower ear!
IT5TME LITTLE TH! NGS W DOnT COUNT*
m MAToR RELIEVES THE AUXIElV OVER rilS ABSENCE
SALESMAN $AM
A CUTTING REMARK
WHEW* I NEED A JHWJ6. ’—^
au. Right- i hao a heck op pi
TIME THDMOfWlNG TWWG TO>
•SEE. WHERE I SHOULD Jrffi
CWOJL TONES - HOWS
vnuuw ivi,ui -1 iwvv J 1 G'WRH-YOU n
BUSINESS BEEN SINCE. ) WWNT HEifc LAST
I WAS HERE LAST A WEEK-l DONT
V WEEK? /V KNOW YOU
WASH nSSELF
ISLIKE ASPlOEK
CONStANTLY;SU(
TQUIETLYvSPUSNI
^-.ilNbyStRy-;
C WHAT til DONT SOU
ND- I DONT SUfYOSLVOO DO',
x rTO ALL HEALED UP
NOW
HATS
vAWV ^
1 TH /^ ^
-nne.?
BANNER-HERALD
iittl'iAiU UUVJ.it Phone 75 ; ;
,2iuoJ.tt ' ■
n r HAD the pleasure of meet-
* \I,. George O’Kelley, one of
* nl0S t proo'eiiive farmers in
5! r k‘* county, last Saturday. Ho
11 . his wheat turned out about
ibushels/ per acre in spite of
, He is. .keeping down the
n weevil pn his cotton and it
stowing oft nicely. His corn
also doing . very well. 'Mr.
...ti| v has this, finest hogs in tins
Poland Chinas, and says
fV mode, them weigh 300
•tis ut suvqn; months old. Mr.
felly' has,, MO little sons, ten
J fourteen„y«a'-s old, who, With
meter anti bfrvester, cut all of
mail "Tain, 40 acres. The
‘ « Ht lutl'can handle either the
I” to,- or the reaper and binder.
wEPY®*®Ar, wtra, iks.
Around Athens |
with rol. T. Urry Gentt |
,,P TOM DICKENS, ohp ;•«
' leading farmers, was in
»„ .SitimlMBfiHe says he lisa
!T„, Vl,aflj'l jhp eotton of wee
's .ml I^tPiTuk are growing of,
MrSIWOW says that
\„,4 a r.i'gro who had left
• M tion ^tiiugro to Chicago re-
Ltd ' gives a 'gloomy
Lflnut uf ■ the exedusters. Ne-
EL who' loft" for the north aro
Lnimine oMdver the state, nnd
winter they will lie com-
J , back in IldoVes. The negroes
L t ppv SS.M per week rent foi
L small rholn.;
'JOHN liOKFWlCK,' of JBost
ii ha-. H?5' acres planted in
mriowersl .The seed make the
It feed fh|i *poultry and stock
S «dl at’« per hurhcl. On or-
, r y lati’d' In‘This sertion from
„tv to fifty'bushel of seed per
re can ke'inndr. In Oregon 11!
.10 tmis «L# are mtitle from
L plant, M'feh'ch w used for
njiu "il#f’,.Thc sunflower also
“ ke , a fine iped W horses and
title, and n j, ; a, ; great milk pro-,
jeer. Oun farmers . should m-
estigat*' this,pew crop.
Gordon freeman, of
Oglethorpe county, says he is'
keeping down the boll weevil and
nis corn is doing nicely. He has
not lost a negro. He says with
poison w e can grow cotton suc
cess! nily under ball weevil condi-
}‘°£ s ’ is better to sell one
J >aie at 2.> cents per pound than
to nave to raise four or five bales
to bring in that much money.
A \ OUNG soldier, who is con-
ftned in the hospital here, makes
a lovely hand hag, which he sends
to the curb market to sell. They
tiring $5 and. are something new
ami Unique.
MR. E L. ARNOLD, from near
junxeys,.in Oglethorpe county, will
bring to the curb market every
Saturday fresh meal and flour,
lie is a subscriber for the Banner-
noraid and will advertise in our
jnipcr. Mr. Arnold says crop con*
jditions have greatly improved
I around him. A large acreage is
planted in peanuts and the crop is
promising.
! MRS. MELL McREE, of Wat-
kinsville, says from one row of
tomatoes in her garden she has
! sold over $7.00 worth and the
vines are still bearing. She
brought vegetables from her gar-
,den to the curb market and by ten
J o’clock Saturday had sold $9.10
worth. The Watkinsville Club, of
which Mrs. McKee is a member,
seat in several cars of produce to
the curb market.
MRS. ALGOOD, near Hodges'
Mill, in Oconee, says they are
k'-epfng «lown the boll weevil with
poison and since the rains crops
have come out wonderfully. Mr.
Langford, of Bogart, says they
have the boll weevil down and
they find very few in the cotton
that is taking on fruit and grow
ing off nicely.
MR. JOHN CASH, of Bogart,
has gone largely into, the bee bus
iness, -find supplies the Athens
market with honey. There is a
nice profit in bees, that work for
nothing and feed themselves. Mr.
Cash has several hundred hives.
EVERETT TRUE
By Condo
■ BB BAHHER-BEKAlP,
'•Jjb* BRAY, near lit, in Mad
Ison county, says his •o5M£M_
field of cotton that can shed its
fruit and will make a bale per
acre. His corn is also fine and
all other CVops promising, Mr.
Bray says farmers around him
are raising plenty of food stuff
and the outlook is cheering and
hopeful.
MR.*TOM DICKENS, who has a
fine farm in Oconee, about five
miles from Bogart, says that some
time since he visited New York
and while in the city called at the
agricultural headquarters where
samples of all maiyjgr,, of crops
are kept on ^exhibit, artfl you can
secure fa£ts about any state or
county. He met the head of this
departmept and wb^.be (Dickens)
in reply to a questioti,' stated that
he was .from Oconee’county. Geor*
gia,, the gentleman remarked: “Do
you khowithat you live In the best
farming county in 1 Georgia. We
keep a. record of crops in every
county in the United States, and
Oconee, from an agricultural
standpoint, leads the state of
Georgia.” Mr. Dickens says this
made him feel very proud «»f his
native county.
IT IS STATED that the failure
of Barrett & Company will not
affect the Hill Mixture, the man
ufacture of which is controlled by
that firm, but it is separate from
their cotton business and Barrett
& Company only, held an interest
in the company to manufacture
the mixture. Its mt
ntinue- the same as h*d
in occurred.;ztf
-r-
d I Ministers
Jfpjjviwfw
| the Canai
lUtu >1d
Mine* of these two
id of the members of
Canadian »nd American In-
MR. MORGAN GAULDING, of.stitutes of Minlmt -»nd MeWllur-
^olbert, says they are mastering gfcal Engineers, the y«t mineral
the boll weevil, and will make a > wealth of Canada will be placed
cotton crop this year. He has a Jon exhibition,
son who runs six plows and of* I Petroleum and gaa will
fors his hands twenty-five cents ’among the principal general sub-
for every live weevil caught in 1 (acts of the technical sessions,
their cotton, but they cannot be which are to be held In Montreal,
found. The same reports about The geology of Santa Elena oil
decrease in weevils reach us from)fields, Ecuador, will be discussed
all over this section. by Joseph H. Sinclair of New
York and Prof. Charles P. Berkey
MR. SMITH, who has charge of 1 0 f Columbia University. Other
Mr. Frank Lipscomb's farm, says papers will be presented by A. F.
-- - Meston of New York end Oliver
U. Bradley of Muakgee, Okla
"‘The Holitnger mine is today
that a gratfed pecan win begin to probably the moat important gold
benr about as soon as a peach.' producing mine of the world. Near
They have 10,000 young pecans n are the highly profitable Dome
grown from nuts for grafting and and McIntyre mines. Then pass-
will start a pecan nursery. ling on to the east down into Que
bec, there are the asbestos mines
which are today, furnishing the
bulk of tbfe asbestos being im
ported into this country.
“The Porcupine Gold District
and the country lying to the east
of It are attracting considerable
.attention at preaent and the Am :
. I eriean engineers whose duty It Is
eng ito advise in respect to them will
"•take this 1 opportunity to familiar-
...... r-J- j iie themselves a little further
griniage next month to the heart i with the y
or Canada’s mineral riches. The‘referred to In the public press.
128th meeting of the American
they have 350 pecan trees four
years old, and some of them havo
as many as fifty nute. This shows
Mining Engineers
Will Investigate
Canada’s Riches
NEW YORK.—Mining
neers from this and other coun tT1 _ T „„„ „ rr -
trics will make tehir summer pil-jize themselves
Institute of Mining and Metallur
gical Engineers, it is announced
here, will be held August 20 to
31 in Ontario nnd Quebec,
manufac ture and With the cooperation of the
READ
banner-herald
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OUT OUR WAY
By Williams
First photo'of Andree LnTayette, French movie ectreee, end Mm
latent, olio ot the French eUge. alnco their recent marriage in Holly
A Their ronuance etnrted while they were playing In the film veralon
Trilby'’In Phrlg. Mlaa LaFayetto tripped into the moyiea on reel
Bribed aa “perfect”
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By Ahern