The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, August 13, 1923, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

mmgmmmmtm TBB BANNER-HERALI1, ATHENS, GEORGIA TOUT 1 -V* J-T ' ri "mbi/T* - ofVaVsM CVetTc * ciiiirch !u raiciiv<l and , tried on tlio *• »>f Uving a Free Mason try to th- teachings and be- < f said church. After a Ions on the defendant went forth UtKK of fish MONDAY. AUGUST 13, 1923. $1 per string of four ndH. Fishermen say ‘ams were one© thought isheii drj* hut they are again replenished. Sand cats are caught on set hooks. MR. PHAVOrns, a prominent " of Jackson county says nof l ive rs-groes left his section any white men who despaired king any money, by farming boll 'weevil conditions. He good cotton crop would tend lid again nnd'ncxt hey will plant, the house- nd front yards In the staple, few weevils are found where ■pted the cut. but Aomrrr.TruAL t investigating the established in sov fleortria and they oil and making The Lexlngtffn ictory was started up in nd Lee runaway, of Ath- contrncted to handle its Ho we will soon find Lex- for ale | n A the will also probably have BIG PARADE WILL MARK CONVENTION OF LEGION IN OCT. S\\ T FRANCISCO.—The big- ffcst and most spectacular mili tary parade ever held on the Pa cific coast, will take place here Tuesday morning, October 10, when the official parade of the American Legion 1023 national convention, is held, on the second morning of the Legionnaires’ an nua! national conclave, October 15 to ID. Twenty thousand officers and enlisted men from the United States • battle fleet will march in the procession. Various military camps ami army posts of north era California will furnish severs thousand marchers. Not less than 80,000 put of the great throng of legionnaires expected here for the national conclave, will be in the line of march. Drill teams, crack hands ‘and military patrols of the Elks, > Shriners, Knight- of Co lumbus, and other lending organ izatioris will take part in the pa rade. National officers and state commanders, wounded and disa bled veterans, prominent world heroes and their buddies, will all befih the procession. A score of grandstands will offer points of vantage to those spectators who do not crowd windows and build ing tops, and the sidewalk lines to witness the brilliant array of military units. Steel Vaults Guard Hinht Grade Alcohol In National Museum (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON. — Extraordi nary precaution for the safe guarding of their supplies of al cohol are taken by the various de partments of the government which use this commodity, now so much In demand for the making of what in the parlacc of the bootlegger Is styled “sympathet ic” intoxicants. Officials of the departments and bureaus declare the system they have installed have operated so successfully that their losses have been nogligilbe, confined to the theft of a pint here and a luart there. And so close is the heck, they assert, that frequently even tKeae small peculations are traced and the offenders dismiss ed. f At the National Museum, which v the preservation of specimens sent to it from all parts of the world, uses only the very highest grade of alcohol, the liquid is kept in a steel vault to which one em ploye other than the staff officers has access. The key to the vault is kept under a separate lock. Supplies arc drawn on requisi tions and the uses made of the alcohol are carefully traced and checked. The museum officers say that there are losses from evaporation and spillage, but that in their system these are carefully estimated amt due allowance made. no Xttemptto KEEP WORKS OF ART IN ENGLAND LONDON.—It Is u . Intended to take any legislative measures to keep works of art, famous books and pictures In this country, £«r W. Joynson Hicks, financial sec retary to the treasury, told a questioner in the House of Com mons recently. The questioner referred to meas ures he thought should be intro duced whereby such treoauf**. which might otherwise be sold to America, might /M»me Instead to national or municipal collection at a fair valuation. The. s«'cgctary *ie question had Ven con- !i>; tfce trustees of the Na tional (Gallery, who advised the nt against any ouch legls- SALESMAN $AM FOUL PLAY AHEAD By^wan /ALL RIGHT-HERES (Tt CHECH Y DOKT FOR PiLL 1 HFV0E WA TYV S WORK WORLD-^IBOO- IE VOO LOSE- ) VU_ I'LL NEOBR NE0ER ^ TO SO0 FKGPilN Mhat DO&jffift FiROA- OILUPiFl MEWI? 71111111 OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ^s-tUis«lW^ TPLttf golf Virol,] OlJE BALL*? « I 1 S'POSE VFVoOWERE - Ml EklGIklEER, Y VoU'DT'AKE VOUR r TRAlkl nitT uirri-l USe-lobt ball:; OVl-niElilbRKlPlKE PLAZA COURSE = —— Atr-'-VL ■ - OUT OUR WAY r - i ■ r By Williams Y v