The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, September 30, 1923, Image 12

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PAOE FOUR THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS. GEORGIA hU.MJAY. SEPTEMBER 30, I92J. &F THE BANNER-HERALD ATHENS, GA. ■ i Boyhood Heroes En^lbhed Every Evening During the Week Except Saturday and Sunday end on Sunday Morning hy The Athena Publishing Company, . Athena, Cia. 1 EARL B. BRASWELL Puhliaher and Genera! Manaaer L H. j; ROWE : r Editor CHARLES E. MARTIN Managing Editor ’ Entered At the Athens Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter under yyc the Act of Congress March 8,1879. ' SOUS TodTOAU. OuTpiT ainT iT ? / wow iTfec CsTfi/'l 5ti35u2iPlrOM5 To A MAG A 7/NS. I AIN’T fT^WELL? oAppl e §auce Hot DoQ. 1 we’ll' leT tbo Be capTais j OSCAR At any rata it saama that soma b»Hy H»« certainly taken lh« OK out of Oklahoma. a J® MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i* The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repiib- lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not othrwlse credited in tull'paperp and also the local news published therein. All right* ‘ ation of special dispatches are also reserved. of ropubli Address all Business Communications direct to the Athena Publish ing Company, not to individuals.^ News ^articles intended for publics- i addressed to The Banner-Herald. Thoughts For The Day Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he i* old he will not depart from it.— Proverbs 22:6. Education is only like good culture; it changes the size but not the sort.—H. W. Beecher. short- 3S a COMMERCIAL HATCHERY With an active poultry association and age of chickens and eggs in this market, a commer cial Hatchery would be an important industry for Athens. It would create a demand for egg-produc- ing hens and it would create a demand for more eggs which would naturally cause an increased price for the poultry products. The cost of establishing such a plant is nominal. An ordinary building to care for the incubators and a place fpr the small chicks to room would be the extent 1 of the investment for such an enterprise. It is believed thet a local company could be organized with ease and with profit to the stockholders. Outside companies will purchase the entire output of the plant and »t a pro fitable price. That much has been demonstrated by tlio Chamber of Commerce of Valdosta, and if the Valdosta commercial organization can successfully inaugurate such an industry, certainly the Athens Chamber of Commerce can. A;commercial hatchery is worth Investigating. It will increase poultry Rising in this community ami create a ready money source which is not now being enjoyed to any great extent from poultry and egg sales. It is worth the attention of the officers of-the Chamber of Commerce and it is hoped that this organization will give to the project serious con sideration and undertake to exploit a hatchery for this section of the state. THE VALUE OF THE NEWSPAPERS The average person possibly does not attach the importance of the newspapers to the home and to every line of business and industries. This was horac forcibly to the people of New York recently when the pressmen of that city went out on a strike. For several days there were no newspapers published in the great metropolis with the exception of a small sheet carrying the mast heads of the va rious largo newspapera published in that city. No markets—no news of the world—no local news—no jaaavertisoments and only a few columns of reading matter relating to the strike and the differences ex- *ting between the workmen and the owners of the newspapers. Such a condition demoralized the great est city of the nation and brought on disturbances to the people who are dependent upoivthese great news gathering agencies for their news and business. Few ever stop to think what the newspapers mean to the average citizens and how much inconvenience and lo--. Ihey would be put to if it were not for the news papers. ' It was indeed unfortunate for the news- pa pi rs and a groat financial lost, but after all it had it s value hr drawing the attention of the public to the importance of. and how much value the newspapera nre to all communities and what a calamity it would be for the country to be deprived of its newspapera— even though for only a few weeks. SHOULD THE PRESIDENT BE A YOUNG MAN? There is much discussion going the rounds of the pres! of the country as to the agea of the proapective candidates for the nomination for the presidency of both the democrats and republican possibilities. President Coolidge is SI, the youngest of any of the prospective candidates so far mentioned. John W. JDuvi.-., of West Virginia, and-Governor Al Smith, of New York are less than 52 .but a few months the senior of Coolidge. James M. Cox is 54; Senator La- fcllotte is 69; Senator Ralston is 6b; William G. Mc-Adoo is 62; Senator Underwood ia 62; Senator Hiram Johnson is 58; Henry Ford ia 61; Governor Pinchot is 59 and William Jennings Bryan who baa been running for the presidency since 1896 is only 04. We do not believe in the Osier theory nor do we believe that because a man has passed the 60 .mile post in life that he is too old to serve his nation as the chief executive. Mellowed with age and experi ence he is better prepared to meet the exigency of the times than a man of younger years. However, the democrats have unusual material from which to se lect a candidate for the presidency. The republican part? has set maue good during its present regin and it is the general belief that the people of the nation hare ready for a change and to go back to the safe land sound form of government inaugurated by Presl- [ dent Woodrow Wilson during the eight years of his service. Notwithstanding the difficulties under which Pres- weiit Wilson labored, no nation was ever better gov erned than America during the most trying times of W-existence. The revolutionary war was 'a mere shadow in comparison with the world war. and yet tho nation was guided successfully by the "wounded soldier” in Washington, resulting in the greatest victory the world has ever known and a reuniting of jur country which can never be set asunder again with war or other disturbances. Governor Walton, of Oklahoma, deserves the raise and support of all law abiding citizens of the ountry in his firm stand against lawlessness and the lolators of the law. His action in suppressing ime will have a good moral effect throughout the ition. How many more times are you going to answer that blamed question, “Have you taken up Mah * Jong yet?" wjthout filing a.wuy and lam* basting the Inquirer right in the smacker? An optimistic guy Is Johnnie Lnlt, Hepes to fill an Inefdo straight. DID IT EVER OCCUR k TO YOU? A Lltftfg of Everything And Not Much #f Anything. By HUGH ROWE. Somtf days ago I .received a request from a.n unknown rosder of this column to pub lish thst immortal poem, "The Boy Stood on the Burning Deck." by Mrs. Hermans. For decades tho young boys of this nation have declaimed from the rostrums of country and city schools ibis lime- honored poem, for oratorical hon ors. The history of the Incident which caused the composition of the poem is most Interesting. In 1798 Louis de Casablancs. a French naval officer born In Cor- lsca, came to America with La- Fayette to assist In the American revolution against England. He was mortslly wounded* during the tat tle of Nile, his ten-year-old boy re fusing to desert either bis father or bis ship, tho Orient Then It was dir*. Hermann Immortalised tho Incident with the poem: Herald-Journal, has startled his friends in nswspspei cir cles by publishing an account of an incident which he states Is Ab solutely true, and. .of course we kcecpt his statement without the The boy atood on the burning deck, whence all but him had fiud; Tho flames that lit the battle's wreck shone around him o'er the dead. Yet beautiful and* bright he stood, as born to rule the storm; A cteature of heroic blood, a bravo, though cblld-Uke form. Tho flames rolled' on—he would not go without bis father's word; His father, faint In death below, his voice no longer heard. Ho called aloud:—“Say, father, least reservation. Here It It with say, If yet my task is done." on n He knew nut that the chieftain lay A man wa8 runn na a new-faah- uncon.clous ol hi, son. loneit reaper and binder one time, and fe|l off the teat. It 'ran over "Speak, father!” once again he * him rnd cut off hi, noae. He pick* cried, ’If I may yet bo gone!” ••* hls nose u » dulckly end stuck And but tho booming shots replied, i 11 hack, pvt a bandage around-it and fast the flames rolled on. I an '* not i°°k at It until after Upon hla brow ho felt their I 11 hai1 *> oal °d again. Ha went bo- breath, and his w-ving hair. * orn 11,0 looking glass, took the And lookod from that lono post, of bandage off and found ho had put death In still,.ye. biave das-,W« "ose on upside down. It never ^ !a l r; I bothered tblm very much except ) every time it rained, it strangled And shouted but onco aloud, "My ant * evcr y Um° he #naesod, father, must I stay?" l h « *>lew off hls hat. • ■While o'er him fast, througu sail* — " SSt - ^ th - Mr. Robert Outd, manager oft hi th « Independent Warehiu.es, Tt WIM- — h . B „ 0 F'“ d " Ine., I" ‘bit city, la to be con- high' U ^ U,ht **!* fl,g on postulated on the uccettful! . beginning of the warehouse this And streamed above tho galant >eaion . llc |, known l0 ott . people gvfllM lllra hannnM «_ ,L „ BUHMUU. XIV II RUUWII IU UM r I>UU|HU child, like banners in the iky. ond tho pe Op i 0 | a this ge ctJ<*> Tb0 ?J2L ‘end esteem?*Ho '"is’* r ho , on n-_1 nnt * esteem. Ho Is a splendid w„. hl7 boy-Oh, •where bu ,, ne „ man BQd ona / ho „ 1 bound to succeed* In the undertafc. ing to which bo has been asslgnotl j tho management ami direction. Hls {long experience and knowledge of Ask of tho winds thst far amutut with fragment strewed . the ] soa— , wl, fu.T,h. ,, , ,1<, wT "iKoT^Vay^o^Tbu^ fair, that well borno their hlm admlrably (or < he m , lon _ But tho ioblest thing that perished thero was tfcat young, faithful heart: AN.ATHENS SUMMERER AT ATLANTIC .CITY SAYS AS FAR AS HE COULD SEE THOSF HATH INC BEAUTIES WERE ALL WINNERS. ALL IS NO* L08T That Athens business man who paid thJ wrong member of the order of “Sons of I Will Arise" out of the "L hoosegow, following a raid on a game of Mis in rbles, N E W * B 0 OK“N E' By John E. Drewry Sid Say, by John M. Slddall (Con tury)-$1.5& Written by that dispenser oi good cheer who made such a re markable succea with the American Magazine of which he was the edl* tor up to the time of hls ^eath, “Sid Says" Is a litUe book filled with healthy, wholesome, stlmulat shouldn’t feel b a d 1 y about It. Think ofihow much Isn’t It too bad that most all bridge party scores nre ruined fo r the prize on account of a partner “that couldn't make a hid with every face card in the deck?" Some wise guy up east has sub mitted n Ust of SS needed Inven tions but among the missing Is n zephyr of the breegy variety that will blow to its heart's content In the summer time but wo"t disturb that batch of papers you have on your desk V4 not anchored with a quarter pound weight. ing editorials. Everyone who has ever resd a copy of the American Magasipe well remembers that page carled In rach Issue under *he caption of Sid 8aya" in which the editor has some practical common sense edi torials written In a way that will hold layman and preacher, Illiter ate man and college professor, heathen and Christian. Well, this little book la Just n bunch of the best of these editorlnls preserved In book form. It is the kind of book to have In one's library and the kind of book to read when one feels depressed. ' ' * John M. Slddall. Dr. Frank Crane, find Thomas L. Masson, editor of Life and Author of "That Silver Lining" are three men who have done much to spread cheer In this world. Two of these men. Messrs Masson nnd Crane, yet live, but tc the regret of millions of people Hie world John M. Blddcll Is dead < Hls gospel pf success and cheer, though still lives—lives through the little book “Sid Says" nnd tho American Magazine, a publication he took hold of when It was hank ton" Which l« so oncnyiiit*us work giving Intimate portraits of the leaders in the Washington setn* “Washington Close-Ups" deals with the personalities at ths National capital. One .outstanding differ ence is to be noted between the two books, howevsr. Ths latter reviews a great many more of the men there, bu^ does not go so deeply Into their nature and psy chological tralta and emotions as does the "Mirrors." In a way the “Close-Ups’' Is more like an inti* mate acquaintance with the per sons in which the writer does not try to pick out and dwell upon their weak points, but rather successful, ly attempts to give his readers some knowledge of the leaders In the world's greatest nation. A striking thing to note about'the “Close-Ups- is ths fact that Wood- row Wilson, the recent president in not Included. This is very strange It seems. In view of the very con spicuous position that this man holds. It Is the first book we have seen dealing with Washington statesmen and politician. thst omits Mr. Wilson. It la altogether . a most fascinating book with lit erary merit. AMERICANIZATION OF BOK AND ROOSEVELTS LETTERS NOW IN DOLLAR EDITIONS. •The Americanization of Edward Bok." that very remarkable and ex traordinary autobiography, this month went Into its twenty-fifth rupt nnd on the rocks nnd brought tda , on and u the « ew eoujo,, WM of tho most MAROEE GRAY’S CHOICE by Dorothy Jarrttaan. (Little, Brown ar\d Company) $1.79. . No, This Wasn’t Taken From Th) Whizbang. Young hopeful, aged sixteen, called up \ Georgette, a college widow of long standing, age twen ty-four, and asked for a, date. “Indeed not." she said. ‘7 can’t go out with a baby!" "Please pardon me," be replied, “I didn’t know."—Widow. ILLUSTRATED NE\ys What week about to bo ob served throughout ths nation does this remind you off? Mrs. Judge Phil W. Davis, of Lsxlngton, is rscognlssd rs one of /the Hading eduepto i of the 4tatc. Recently Sts c School Fubcrintcndont Dalian' Is- sued to her n teacher’s profession al life certificate which • her to teach l.i any of th© r*blJc j Ugh. schools of tho state. Mrs. •DayIs has spent many years of her of great Importance. Tho lo cation of tho branch of the Inde pendent company bora will mean ;iiU«Lu fut; the farmer ns well tho entire community. ATHENS TWELVE YEARS AGO life In tho cause of education and her work In schools and colleges stands out prominently In educa tional circles In this state nnd elsewhere. She Is now fho pros I- Saturday, September 30* 1911. Georgia defeated the A. P. '... entitles from Anniston, Ala., hy a score of 61 to 0. It wan tho first game of the season and on account of ’he extreme heat, short quarters woro played—10, 10, 7 and 5 minutes. Pol. M. O. Michael returned after a five weeks visit to New York. T*k> llttlo girls, daughters of Rnche Whcoior, of Commerce, .1... i j ,l- ,, , , _ . nm nu u Huutui, ui \<uuiiiiurNtx, iL L‘S? „ u f0 , ri1 V* 001, 01,0 i »><*«! a Lain of cotton In one d»r. of the leading achoola of tho atate. J Hearte. IS year old, plotted 653 pointed. Clerk E. J. Crawford "Uncle" Jim Williams, c'dltor and owner of the Grsensboro Letters T fTCHALLY thouMsda of lottera li recommending the cao of B. B. S. NO OPERATION FOR HER picked 561 pounds Mr. nnd Mrs. J. C. Hutchins an nounced tho enticement of their daughter. Lydia Slyc. to Mr. Mor- tou Strahan Hodgson, tho wedding to oc nr October 18th. Cotton : 10 14 rents—dull mar ket. v Weather: Hot. Geufgia Weekly Press associa tion endorsed H. M. Stanley’s can- —the great blood purider and ays- RIm Tnnlt LyJia E-Pinltlinm’tVf dldacy for tho office of Commla. tom builder—ell telling how 8.8.0. j,U, fVmnnnnJ nnil PccJI sinner of Labor and Commerce, restores the stato of well being by WUPOUM «Bd MCUM , Until a gnmo warden can be ap- —.. . ..... ... thf Operation Doctor Aarued pointed, clerk e. j. Crawford ’ ; agreed to act as deputy warden. LooiavOle. Ky.-"Iwiah to thank ’Mlaa Rnby Anderson, of Oconee creating rod blood cell! are re- celred dally by tho manufacturers Of 8.8.8. What 8.8.8. has dona for other* U will do for you. Is your vitality sapped—your esnrago gone—your health undo™Inod—your bm!n miiatr—thn niH fighting spirit mlsslngf Do you want to get back to the day* of “once before”—tho days when yon wero young and strong—health, and buoyant— when your brain was active end your eplrlt nilro with ambition? 8.S.8. it the euroat and safoat way to natoro health, enornr and vitality. Since 1831, 8.8.8. has been bringing back claar, sparkling •yes—radiant expressions of well being—building up nerve power— sending red blood courting through the eyatem—building rod Mood cell*. Tour nerve power la born In the blood cell. Increase your red blood cells and watch yourself 1m- ^& 8. makes stronger and healthier bodlee—bodies free from lmpurlttae—free from rhenmattsa —free from akin eruptioni—ecao- ma. blackheads, pimples and bolls. Any leading drag store will supply you and, for econo, tty, get a largo elia bottle. The a«ony of aehool opening Is ov%r and now tho main thing th« •ehee! kWs arc Interested in Is whether tho eircuo io wmlnq this fall or noL More than the usual amount of Interest In attached to “Mardee Oray’n Choice,* 'a book for girls by Dorothy Jnrnlgan* due to the fact that the author of the volume Io r. resident of Athens. Mrs. Jnrnlgan Is well known , to the reading pub lic of Athens through her contri butions to the press of the city and her wide activities In the work of her sex. • The hook Is described as having been written for girls between the agea of ten and fifteen, and ' for girls of thnt nge there Is no doubt that the work will receive a most wide sale nnd popularity. The pub lishers of the book in a letter to the reviewer expressed especial pride In hAving the work on their llsL Wl that It should be what Is known as a “popular edition"* or a dollar edition. With tho exception of a reduc tion In the number of Illustration! and a cheap blnding^he book is the same ns the oth# editions that have I Even with the this twenty-fifth edit! tlful book ahd wouN the best library and . cel lent gift volume.' At the same time tiat the Scrlb* jiers brought out “Tlie Americani zation of Edward Bok” In the one dollar edition, they also brought out a similar edition of 'Theodore Roosevelt's Letters to Hla . Child- Regarding this particular work, Mr. Roosevelt toefhre hls death said that he had father have It printed than all the rest of th« books that had been Jkritt*n about him. In this volume or# W be found the personal letters* -Wfatten . s.f nnv members of his famllyMd the II- h.IuhvhhTh ■rhnni ifri* herfHET-1 luitrat * d >•»*•»■ to hljlyoungett Md ’Tbl Mrrrl chlMr,n ar * *»Uc«l«rly .iHretaln- and It mi '"*• Th * *° o1 of ,h - * nat • ^ I l>« 8l( '«"* '• *•» ahown In thl, £ that .h. will bream, a favorite wlli. j *"' c " i^ 8 . _ .II .hi tom., nenunlnt.d I f m8 8unl Of S dollar. ftHrMITlTd « Evidently Governor Walton lieved the klanitee were too active on thf last syllable. , Botcher that old summer top- piece against a new fall fedora that New York wins the wor’d cham plonshlp. you for what your medicine hts done county, was presented with S100 ■for me. I wot in in gold for the excellent field work bed for eight or for the Norma) School by the of- »k»d«yg # *Tery ffclals of ths» institution. 5Ee doctor ^said Diink Cascade Ginger Ale my only relief wa« ~ THINKING If y^ou think you ore beaten, you are. If you think you dare not, you don’t. If you'd like to win but you think you can’t, s almost a cinch you won’t. If you think you'll lose, you’re lost For out of the world we find 8ucceis begins with a fellow's will, It's all In the state of mln.1. If you think you're outclassed, you are: We've got to think high to rise, You've got to be sure of yourself before You can ever win apprize. Life’s battles don't always go To the stronger or foster man: But soon or late the man who wlnt Ia the man who thinks he can. —Anonymous. DAMAGED SOULS, hv Gamaliel Bradford, (Houghton, Mifflin Com panyMlOO. far better value fbpfcgw&uofny than much of the traah*mxne way of novela and teg aloJFTOirib nov appearing «m ♦».- Drink Good Crape all tho.. who toom. acquaint.* | with her through a reahlng of th." n blu - c,0,h 8B< > 18 hook. A more Intereating group of peo pie Is not to he found In any book tNmra i. * s v- found In tMi »■■■ by an Athenian, nnd the method of presen'ation of the story is excel lent. The hook is altogether fasci nating, and Maruee Gray Is ouch a wholesome character—the kind of girl who is always the lender In her set. always having a leading part In those healthful activities In which girls of that age participate She Is both Joyous nnd industrious, capable of adapting herself to the occasion. Manv older people will enjoy reading the work. Berton Braley’s Daily Poems J^d'ofLiStai * S,RL CL f" K * ,N BB'TAIN Pinkham’e modi-. POORLY PAID, ASK RAI8E dues and tried the V <SSl Ub l5 1 d C ^ , UJOTJON-ffljrl cletk , Am „. •native 'Wash, taa °GI«o who bemoan lha ullrn- *Jd they rarely did woodtra for mo. ne88 '•* ani1 twenty dollar 1 fool line all the time now, alio am 8 we *'“ B,1 * rle8 nre considered picking op In weight. I will tell any lucky by their poorer paid counts ■ one that your modidnea are wonder- porto in England, fal, and you mav publiah my letter There are 3.000 women clerka in Kl?a W a. _ r ! government ofttcca, aome of ther. 11» Aih.St. LoukTffle. k T- . . . with eight reara experience, who Rl^lrhd nrnrMnn -n«M * a « 1 83 »®j• LipvnoilCr, wnu .El W ««*»• left than the equivalent nf rio a week. They donf like It, ule troubles.’ Lvdio 1?. Pfnlrh.Jdl. bot ,h °r don’t know what to do hj[; abou ‘ ’It fee there are .till more wh^rWtaTrerentofcirraS! «■»» 1.000000 unemployed In Eng- trepMes. It contain, nothing that i ,8 “d who itand ready to pounco can injure, and tenda to too* up and u P°n potltions the minuta they are strengthen the organa concerned, so ♦•rated. Moat of there government that they may workin a healihy. clerka are In the late twenties, normal manner. Let it help you ai | aome have posted thlrly. lice NwlfaM. ithasthouaacdaofothera It is now UuingalmMt aUovcrtbe world. ■ . Ward, the baker, received his ae> ouittal in etyla—he had a wed «f chewing gum packed beck in his Jew. Among tho*e right on root- era* row at the game yesterday was Dr. J. J. Bennett. There's a reason, he’s Joe'* daddy. “Germany 'surrenders uncondl Bonnily." Something like that was heard balk In 1919. It seems that surrender vaccine Jutt won’t take. Style ehowa are net so popular as they once were. The styles are Wonder what would happen If a few mountain moonshiner* were ta /mploy tactics of re maining out of court a la 811* vercteln-Dldato? THINGS TO WORRY ABOUT Now Port, that fashionable re- r*rt. har iuat been fra*d of 118,* 000,000 catarpillars. It la quite the natural thing' to expect to read the biographies of men who have atood out through the agea for their sound metal, true character, and lives filled with events to whleh a nation may loot up with pride, hut it la certnlnlj an oddity to find the biographies at the opporitc type—'“Damaged 8oula* aa Gnmlallel Bradford calls hie new book which has' Just been brought out by the Ifoughton MIL flln Company. In thia book are to be found the portraits of seven men. all of whom are held in more or leas disrepute by the majority of the population of this country. They are Bene diet Arnold, Aaron Burr. John Roanoke of Virginia, P. T. Barnuir Thomas Payne, John Brown, and Benjamin F. Butler. Pevnnd ""<•-!!«n the portr&IU uf these men stand out far above any thing of their nature that has ev er been written. They are keen character analyse* ;; eacn of the men and give an Insight Into the truy character of the men not be fore offered the public. The author’s style la lucid, Invtt !ng f beautiful and carries with It on Intimacy and accuracy that 1* beyond reproach. A read!nr ♦hr h*ik weii demonstrates the truth- fulness of an old saying that ha* b *r ome trite—"There 1* n little bit of good In the worst of u* ot vlr b,t of bad ,n the Appreciation, \ll«gu*t, reprimand. ■"** humor are all to be*, found in the various accounts, and ONLY OCCASIoWxI^lV Every re often I aay to nireelf, “Wh.t i. ilie U,e uf llii. viruaaiv for pelf? I, ■ Why not be leisurely, why not be Sail to aome Island wheye under a palm I can doze happily day aftei} day. Letting tho btiey world rpll aa 11 »«y; ' -j :nr Why ahould I work myaelUnfb a coffin?" ,!,i. Every re often. Every re often I contemplate go ing ■ -.1.. - Where there are rorei, eternally growing, ,| Some place where food ialmoal drops In your lap.;:. ..’n Only—to go there take* money, and I Harenjl^ enough of £h^ ( ,^redful So life atay, hard aitd rahues Io to ufton. Still. I can dream of a kindlier sky Every eo often..' 1 ’ Every ao aften, and aiica In a while, I long for life on a tropical’Isle. Wherever, la nothing iwtytever Only to loaf under aklea that are Vet, when tho first aubtlo anell baa declined, I would ha bored by a Ufa tU; kind. Weary of breena that cpoatantly •often. Loafing la pleasant, but only, I find, r- Every ao often. ',j ., reading of the book will ’itave one with n kindlier feeling for the •even "damaaed aoula” Included In Mi. Brndford’e excellent book 8 "k Te c.mpti Bib:* . Reading in All ScheM WA.H.NOT°N CLOSE-UPS by Edward 0. Lowry (Hougton ‘ flln Company) |3J)0. Written by a mnn who wee bora In AtlantOv who at one time was a member of the etaff of the Atlanta Con.tltutlon, and who to today a foremeel writer for several of Amerlca’a beet mngnxinea. “Wa.h- Ineton Cloee-Upa" to a book that will be read with ..pedal Intereit only beeaue. of the excrllrn-- of the rendinc but becaute of uuthor hlmetlf. SPOKANE. Weak. - Thht fhl. .« a Chrlataln nation, that the AAieriean nation wa. founded on. th.’ illl/Ii. Urn) all eonatltutlonal pruvlslen. ar. mc- ondary of the law. of Chrtot aa »« forth In tlw RIM, an d th.t.the Kin, Jam., vnrrion of th. Mrtpture. to tb» official buto for th. free fun damental law of Ood on wlllch the nation to uublMtwd, to th of th. Blbl. Fellowship of ( by R. L. Edmtoon. of Preablterton lawyer acting ' Synod of Waahlngten of tho Preaby- re'to ^7’’ “ B ’ S ’ A ” 88 w '"