Newspaper Page Text
j&sas.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS. GEORGIA.
TUESDAY, MARCH SI, 1925.
JEFFERSON. Cn. — 'Plans
already underway to build n
irtrucf
•m .
• fm structure* in plat _ -
frame house for the .Methodist
church that burned here Sunday
rooming. The building caufcht
while Sunday school was in pro-
Kress and fanned by n strong
wind the flames aocn consumed
the structure.
Heroic work on the part of the
Jefferson and Commerce fire de
partments saved nearby residen
ce*. A brick edifice will replace
the old building.
mPTIST PUfERS
II MOIL
MACON, Ga.—An invitation t n
the Mercer Players tu dine with
the Bbcrton Rotary Club while In
that, city haa been accepted l>y
Cary 0. Pickard, busincas mnn-i.
gvr of that organization.
ElUrton la the third dato on
a five-day tour beginning with
Buford, Ga., March 52. and and.
ing with Athena April 4. Pre
ceding thin trip the playeri have
entertained audiences in Sanden-
vUh and Louisville.
The Mercer Playeri will appeir
at' the Colonial theatre on Satur
day evening of this week. Ad
vance sale of tickets will go on
Wednesday at Jowera'.
Salesman Wanted
I want a good reliable .bustler
to sell Rawleigh Products in Ogte-
thorpo County. I am buying Raw-
Irish Products, at about 20 per
cent lower wholesale prices than
similar Products can bejmrehaaed
from chief competitor. This umkaa
the business of selling Rawleigh
Products one of the moot attrac
tive and profitable proposition*
for men with limited capital and
unlimited ambition. Call and see
me personally, St night, after
Monday.
R. G. WALLACE
- SCO mil Street, Albans,
Phone 14-W.
COW FEEDS—
Milk Maker Dairy Feed
• 'Wheat- Bran
Bran Shorts
Molasses Feed
Alfalfa, Oats and Syrup
Cotton Seed Meal
Cotton Seed Hulls
Beet Pulp
Timothy Hay
Oats -
NICHOLSON-COMER
- COMPANY
CHICKEN FEED-
Egg Scratch
Egg Mash
Growing Mash
Baby Chix Feed mjn
Oyster Shell
NICHOLSON-COMER
' COMPANY
Dressed Headless
Croakers (Frying Fish)
For Wednesday morning,
at 25c the pound. No
waste, and reasonable
price.
ARNOLD-ABNEY & CO.
ENRIGHT SAYS:
When my
ALL O’ The Wheat is in
ALL O’ The bread
ALL O’ The World will be
Much Better Fed.
We Make ENRIGHT’S
WBCLWHEAT BREAD.
ARNOLD-ABNEY & CO.
“Clean Up” Yes -Vnd
Include Those Guys
Who Litter Up Cars
With Trash; Money
Mad; On To Dalton
(Continued From Pan* One)
LISTEN TO THI8
FROM PENNSYLVANIA
1LVRR3H3JURG—The , --.»!«
of Pennsylvania nre main at
the into of SS.472.OOU u : ir.
because of the inability of :he
Department of Highway a to
Improvb 7C0 mile* of dirt : ad
on the State's |<rimary nyM- m.
Every milt of unimproved ir. tin
highway In Pennsylvania can*-
on n I one of $7.2v'j n year to he
traveling public. Tho«<- ;it *i-
mentn wt-ro n»;»de -by Will.ifm
II. Connell. Engineering Ex- fi
tly* cf the I’e.infrylvamta De
partment of Highway*-
'Mr. Connoll t iy« that :«t an
average cost of $50,000 a -illc
I'eitneylAvitnla’a proposed
000.000 bond Iimuss will b ipd
1,000 in kirn of road. Thin t on-
ptructlon for the most part -In
to be f on the main thorough-
farm when* rafftic avcr.igss
more than J.000 vehlclee a dai*.
ruwtnir * dirt road ctvu*e* ‘a*
lose of $7,300 prr mile a year.. .
"There it# alw. n busiticsn 1 out
ft over $131.400,000 a yc.tr." ,
says Mr. Connell. ‘That Ik
tho bunlncKK that the tncralsio.
In tourin'. traffic will bring .to
the Ht.-tte when the main high
way system b entirely pa rod
Tbl» Is particularly applicjifli*
to Pennsylvania at prr««nt,
becaue* there are * KtJII 7«o
mile* of read on the primary
system to lx* paved before thla
great Kyat ora of highway* in
entirely connected.’*
Opens Wednesday
Night At The First
, Methodist Church
(0mU.iu4 from Fag* Ob.)
WHAT YOU WILL
HEAR ON YOUR
RADIO
IN TRIBUTE
Copyright, 1925
My United Prea*.
I
J
TUE8DAY, MARCH 31. 1926
WJZ—New York, 484 3 me
tres; WRC— Washington 468
metre*; KYW—Chicago 636.4
metres; KOKA—Pittsburg 309
metres; UB£—Sprtngiitld 333
metres; WGY—Schncctady 379
metres—9 p ra- E8T—Bruns
wick Music Memory Contest-
WEAF— New York 491.6 me
tres; WFI—Philadelphia 384.5
metrek; VVJAR—Providence 306
metres; WEEI—Boston 478-9
metres: WGR—Buffalo 319 me
tres; WCAE—Pittsburgh 461-3
metre*; WEAR—Cleveland 389
metre*; WSAI—Cincinnati 325
metres; WWJ—Detroit 382-7
metre*; WOC—Davenport 483
metre*; WCCO—Minneapolis
416 4 metre*—9 p- m. EST—
Associated Glee Clubs coneert,
direct from New York Metro
politan Opera House.
K 81—Los Angtles 467 ms-
tres—9 p. m • PC8T— House
of Oriental Music-
. WJY—New York, 405.2 me
tres—9 p- m- EST— St Cecilia
Club Coneert.
WOAW—Omaha, 826 metres
—9 p. m- CST—Omaha Mooee
Band.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1915
WEAF, New York, 4914 uw-
tree; WTA3I, Cleveland, 389.1
metres; WJA", Providence,
3094 metres; WTIC. Hartford.
348.6 metres; WOOM, Phila
delphia, 508.2 etres; WCAP.
Washington, 4684 metres;
WGR, Buffalo, 319 etres, 8:20
p. m., EST. New York Phil
harmonic Orchestra.
WCCO. Minneapolis, St.
Paul. 416.5 metre* 8:20 p. tn..
Ci>T. North Dakota night.
WCAE, i’Ittabargh , 561.3
*tr«. 8:30 p. m.. EST. Shubert
quartette and trio.
WOC, Davenport, 481.S me
tre* 9 p. m., CST. Organ re-
WNYC. New York, m me
tre* 8:30 p. m. EST. Mualc
appreciation chorus.
Ac thla long train of Ilf, twaep i .feeling that we, who feel ouraelve.
into the golden distance to eternity I richer for htshavtngHved. do bow
carrying with it the eoula of our """ “
honored dead, wc are left a«<-
big feature, of the (cries of Meet
ing* E .Hcrmonaon and Udtncr
Hammontrec will conduct the ting
ing. Theaa two aong director* have
boon auoclated with Mr. Trotter
for many yean.
The 1926 Conference, at uiual,
glvee a special welcome to north-
eaoy Georgia cltiten* Dr. Mor-
gap haa conducted eeverol Bible
Conference, here and each year
the crowd of out of town viaitorn
increase* Ilia fame as n Biblo
scholar, and minister of *Jie Gob- . , »■„
C l Is world-wide and thoeo who . ““i 1 ?*."’ JS wllhin , two »*•"
to heard him onco never let un
GERALD CHAPMAN
AND HIS CAREER
*P«itlpu*d From Page One)
rotic Ind to la
for his life. _ __
had Ilttlo trouble finding evil
opportunity to hoar him aiip by.
Twice Daily
Dr. Morgan will lecture twice
dally,, at 4 o’clock each afternoon
and-8 o'clock lit night, all at tho
First Methodist church. Mr. Trot
ter will apeak each morning to the
his name had appeared upon tho
police register for tho first time.
Ho stole somo jewelry, was con
victed of grand larceny and sen
tenced to 14 months in prison.
A year later he wns , paroled
into the custody of a wealthy oil
man of philanthropic nature. This
man tried to put young Chapman
Upon the right trail. He gave
— — 4d/n._j * h,m « f 14-a-weck job typing let-
52«S « C y, , i t J t S d the ,5 lrc tcr * ,n h,s °Mce. For just one
SouU” He will deliver a lecture at month Chapman went straight.
4 especially for the women and ono j Then he stole $113. He admit-
at nigh tfor the cn, dlacussing ted tho theft and this time was
Christ's method with individuals. ■ sentenced to three years. Ho was
These services are not restricted paroled bdfore his term expired,
to cither sox. All of general in- i And now it looked a* thouuh
'Chapman had learned his lelson
and would at l**t go straight.
But he had been branded wtin
the scar of "ex-convict.” Tho po
lice were watching him. When
fiamo Thursday'made a now start ns a street
uamc mursaay cnt . conductor he VH rgcopnjxcd
one day, and summarily dismiss-
twilight of realities.
Words are oft times poor in
struments of expression as we at
tempt to pay homage to our great
leaders who have passed on Into
the .vast, unexplored, land -o!
dreams, so far and yet so hear.
Is it not, therefore, fitltng that
we, who have lived and worked ur-
der the light of this man of match
less modesty and refinement shoal !
pay tribute to bis characterKSO fu >
of majestic tenderness and wearing
the white flower of a blameles.l —» -
life, and leave to history the praise! The foregoing resolutions were
of his achievements. 'adopted at a meeting of the stu-
It is with unstudied and unforce! dents of Lumpkin Law School.
our heads and hearts in solemn
tribute to his noble and generous
life so worthy of adoration.
Let it, therefore, be resolved
that the life of this man, who, in
the mild and mellow maturity of
age, awaiting his call to that eter
nal silence, cast a noble light over
our lives, shal not have been in
vain, but shall sing itself forovor
FIFTY SOLDIERS
DROWNED WHEN
MARKET NEWS
L. C. BROCK & CO.
PRIVATE WIRE
(By Associated Press)
DETMOLD, Germany. — Fifty
member* of the German Reich*
into our .memories, and forever *ohr were drowned in the river
echo in our heart*
Therefore, we,- the Students of
the Lumpkin Low School, do pay
our humble respects to the mem
ory of our beloved leeder. Judge
Andrew J. Cobb.
Walter Childs
Nets $56 Per
Acre On His
Alfalfa Crop
- Defense Of Trial Of
j Gerald Chapman
| Tuesday Attempt To
1 Discredit Testimony
! (Continued From Pat On*)
defendant In Springfield in Juno
>f 1924.
Step by step he traced their re-
, l.-itionehip until bo brought them
Alfalfa will make Northeast J*®. New> to p«bM■<
Georgia rich - d.c*re# Dr. !»««noon <t October It.
Andrew M. Soule, prceldriit of ,h ® c ? r » na en '
Ibo State College of Agrfcir- *» rM '»• C ? Tl f«’ n “ d Uvonthnl
uro. Dr. Goulo told tho Kl- | »<or* Fbeon “Id. tVben the ban-
BulldoRs To Leave
On-Trip After Final
(ConHnusd from page oin.)
ed.
Thla, in all probability, planted
a new seed of bitterness against
society. He was a social outcast.
It is not a new story. Tho same
or ,1.0 P'tchlnr.twff, p it
'■Aca’- Edwards, .tar twirlor of f B util f w ‘“ Months' 0 Chapin W w»
BJorkman, captain and - Center-
fielder; Uanrls at first; Hudgins,
shortstop; Fox, second bMa; .Et 1 -
wards. Dunlevy,^Parker, «d.Flo«* )Coul4 bc WT | tten efthousand, of
tho Dartmouth pitching staff for
the past two years will bo ,0011 in
action, moat likely, in one of tho
two game* Edwards has boon of
fered contracts with the Clsvelaml
Indians and the Athletics.
Andy Chambers or Emmett Tu!-
ley trill probably pitch th, opomr
Wednesday. Both have won two
famca for the Red and Black ibis
RAJN
WAFERS
In Chocolate, Lemon and
Vanilla, and Cheese. Try
these wafers when you
have your next party.
Something new, some
thing different.
ARNOLD-ABNEY & CO.
Cream Puffs and
_ Chocolate E’Clairs
“Itioe today.
Cross Buna and
Rolls
Made every day.
ARNOLD-ABNEY & CO.
Hot Cross
French
V SEE
Hinton Securities Co.
for
Loans On City Real
Estate. •• *
month* Chapman was
back in prison for theft.
1 Taken to trial his pa*t record
was thrown at him. Thi* time it
vraa 10 year* in priaon that he
faced.
Gerald Chapman vraa now 23.
Thera waa nothing to divtinguiah
him from the thousands of other
petty criminala that fill the pri*-
, - — on*. His crimes had been cheap
•eason, and have shown rare Torn, and unmarked either by ingen-
Dartmouth’s coming to Athens 1* I uity or imagination. Yet he waa
always intereating, aad theae two | of far higher degree of intelli-
ramca rival those in the past. Ir I gence than 90 per cent of the
a a popular nine and a large crowd | criminal claaaoa. He was bright,
ta expected for the two game*, i quick to learn, with tho bravado
Jeff Teareau, former big league youth. Here wa* fertile soil
with John McGraw*s Giant-* for good or evil.
A a usual it was into the hands
of evil that ho fell-
His sentence took him to Au
burn prison. And there ho first
met George Anderson.
Anderson belonged to the school
of criminal* that figure more
frequently in fiction than in fact
A man of middle
pitcher with John McGraw's Giants
haa been coachlnr »he Big Green
team for tho past several yen re
and Traraeu believes that he his
the strongest nine since he ha*
been coaching at Dart out h. lie m
confident of not loolng a garni* on
the southern trip.
Grid Star
Captain Bjorkman, All-American
gridiron star, will probably hurl
one of the games against the Bull
dogs. Bjorkman is one of the b\it
all round athletes at Dartmouth
and is one of the best hitters on
squad.
allowing the second Dartmouth
game the.Bulldogs will leave Ail*,
tns for Alabama where they meet
the Auburn Tigers in two games
and the Crimson-Tide of Alaban^
in another two game aeries. After
ths four games In Alabama the
Bed and Black bop over to Ma
con where they meet the Mercer
Beam in a two game aeries, re
turning to Athena on April 13.
TRAP SHOOTING PLAN’S
SAVANNAH, Ga. — At tho
monthly meeting of the board of
governors of the Forest Gun Cluu
plana were made for the
••neon, which it is indicated will
include application to the Amataer
Trap Shooting Association f ir the
A man of middle age, suave,
educated, of high intelligence; «
high das* confidence man, this
Anderson, who was known to the
police as La Fargcm Heins,
Brown Bower and what not
It is recorded that Anderson
had received his degree of bach
elor of arts at the University of
Upsula. He could speak five lan
guages fluently. His Spanish was
so excellent that he had been
made a teacher in the prison
school.
He had sound scientific train
ing, but he preferred to use it U
defraud society. He had made
experiment* with skin pigment;
he was a splendid mfaroRCopist
having made a microscopic atndV
of human hair; he waa skilled in
photography and in the chemistry
of dye* and pap«f making and 3
dozen and one other things.
All ct which mode him all .the
more dangerou* . in the eyea of
sodetv:
And in appearance he was
privilege 0 f , hoWi^T^gUtera? l p,umn ,
^r" ,o B
ture
wants and Hot ary clubs recent*
!y that if this section would
put 5.000 acres In Alfalfa next
fall It will be the biggest step
that can bo token to bring new
settlors here and build up
Northeast Oeorgla. County
.Agent J. TV. Klror stales that
5.00 acres of Alfalfa will save
the growers a half million dol
lar hay bill next year.
The Btato College of Agri
culture experts declaro that
this section ought to have five
million acres in Alfalfa. It
Is the greatest potential Al
falfa seotion known. Alfalfa
has been grown |o some ex
tent in Clarke county and since
Dr. Houle's statement many
inquiries about tho crop and
how It should be handled have
bs*n received at the office of
Mr. tFlror Indicating that In
terest in Alfalfa growJng Is In-
erasing.
The Banner-Herald la ask
ing growers of Alfalfa In this
county to tell their experiences
in growing Alfalfa for the ben
efit of those who are thinking
of taekllng it.
Boosts Alfalfa
Alfalfa has no more enthu
siastic booster thar. Walter
Childs, well known Clarke
CountaJn who has been opera
ting one of the prettiest and
most representative ftirnv* In
this section for several years.
Mr. und Mr*. Childs, who
Jlvo a few miles from Athens
off the Lexington read, have
developed a beautiful spot
and homo on what was mor-
merly a cotton patch. For
four years they have raised
alfalfa on a four-acre field.
Last year Mr. Child ••cleared'’
$56.00 per acre on his crop of
alfalfa after paying all expen
ses. In addition four hundrrd
chickens of the Childs' graced
on tho field every day. Mr.
Childs says he doesn’t know
anyone who cleared $55.00
per acre on cotton last year.
At first the grocers In Athens
who handled hay did not want
1L Mr. Childs says. After
trying bne load they literally
'begged him to supply them, ho
asserts. Mr. Childs has had
fine luck with ths four-acre
field but another eight-acre
field didn't pan out so well, lie
thinks he did not sufficiently
prepare tho ground. Ho tried
the 8-acre last year. From the
four-acre field he gathered
* twelve tons last year, lie sold
It at $16 pper ton.
SEARCHING CLOCK
COPENHAGEN. — To pravgnt
suspicion being cast on honest
workers in factorise handling
gold and precious stones, where
searchers art necessary to keep
down thefts, a Danish cnjrii
has perfected a clever invention.
It is a sort of an electric time
clock which can be act so that it
flashes a red light at irregular
interval*. The rad flash m
that the worker who punches the
clock drill bo searched that day,
simply because he happened, to
punch at that time and not be
cause of any auspkions regarding
Him. m
LIVERPOOL. Eng.—G. Littfe,
who haa been employed by a Liv-
erpool clock firm for 60 years,
claims to have wound more clocks
than any other man in the wqrld.
He estimates that he has wound
1400400 clocks during that time.
dlt returned, according to Sheen
he said;
“everything is alt fixed."
Thon they drove to Meriden.
Then to Waterbury and back, to
Meriden, where they spent the
night. Early Sunday morning,
Shean said, they went to - New
Britain and the murder of the po
liceman followed.
•Fhenn said he
the store, saying “This
dangerous for mV. The wttneas
said he hadn’t seen Chapman since,
until they met In the courtroom.
Step-Father Of Guy
Graham, Murdered
Boy, Sticks To His
Denial Of Crime
(Continued From Page Part
(By A—gristed Prats)
MOSCOW. — Nearly fifty per- July
ms wore killed and one hundred Sept. ...
other* injured in a head on col- 1
lislon between an express and a
suburban train here late Monday
nifht. -
in jell at Elberton as the crJra-
Ekx> did it. playing bear.
9. A white man did U but
refuse to tell who.
"ETco done It, accident
al.''
5. Alvin did It and "mads us
negro done It. Said he
would whip us if wo didn’t."
Said Alvin gave them a de
scription of the supposed ne
gro.
"Elco dono It, accident-
We was Tying before."
Sheriff Hall stated here Tues
day morning that he had heard
the children had changed their
story agaJfi Monday morning. He
' was away at the time, lie said
[J he had not questioned them since
!| returning. The Sheriff said . po
] plans have beqn made to give the
| children a preliminary hearing.
Insists Innocenct
Alvin Graham had not obtained
attorney Monday. He said be
aq not able to afford on#. ‘ .
Alvin Graham .insist* he did. not pifemo court for a re-hearing
kill tho mtle child, born to hi*
wlfo before their 'marriage, ffe
*ays he loved Guy "like he was my
own boy" and wouldn’t have harm
ed him for anything. He sold ha
never whipped him during the two
Back From Florida
minutes trouble."
Little Guy Graham was shot at
the home of . his step-father Mon
day. two weeks ago. Tho top of
the child’s head was blown off
with a shot gun.
Read Bumer-Henid ,
Want Ada.
NEW ORLEANS, U. — Urn-
pool wsj due 3 to 0 down on old
crops sod 2 lower on October by
American markest.
Compared with but ywr, stock
on shipboard at Galveston 1'
da- wsj 92 fXti bale. t» 29,
st New Orleans COfiOO v« 24,
End of March exports from l
Tuesday or Wedneidsy .likely be
(ShU* weather develo/menU
in southwest, e'peclslly In Tsxs*
trade account* etc., have to be
reckoned with Tuesday. Market
displayed more resistance again, t
effort, to deprsaa prices Monday
and if no rain of consequence
overnight, some recovery-may be
broihm '
- - - - . . DC ICS* ISVOrSDIC XOr rOUi U» Uw
the bridge gave wsy and the flrst w «tem belt, but if gxsJ rains
estimate of fifty drowned may (occur “ -
be exceeded. The men throqmlomble
Into the water bad t
s “ Mt ^ h ^ k?p -" ^LTsttB&yaErs g
«!» ssVttS ^n* «d •
Weser Tuesday rooming when a
bridge being constructed In eon*
nectlon with the Reichswebr man-
cuver, collapsed.
The victims were part of s Col-
limn marching In full field equip,
ment, which attempted to use the
temporary structure.
More than 109 . soldiers were
precipitated into the river when
Madison County
Farmer Succumbs
To Long Illness
Mr. J. S. Caritherj, aged 68,
died in Madison county Monday
afternoon st 4 o'clock after an
Illness of- fix mouths. 1'oneral
service, will be conducted Wed
neidsy aftsmoon at 3 o’clock by
Rev. Frank Chandler. Baptist
minister, and Rev..Jlmaait Adams,
Baptist minister. Interment will
be 4n Carithers family' cemetery,
Bernstein Brothers, funayai home.
avy equipment and 'it waa fear-1
I that the inability of many <
them to free themselves might
greatly Increase ths death list.
ESS MEN OF
STATE MEET 10
DOOST BONDS
(By As*
ATLANTA,
100 buslnei
3,226 bales vs 7,613 Sat!
Sentiment apparently
again, both (Idea cautious
to uncertainty of weather in the
southwest, particularly in l ^exas,
In charge.
Mr. Oarlthers is jurvived by
bis widow, three sons, Messrs. J.
N. B„ J. J., and F»tU Carithers;
six dsughtsrs, Mrs. West Childs.
Mrs. Will Smith, Mrs. Will Fort-
son, Mrs. John Epps, Mr*. Dsvo
Fortson, Mr,. Cleo Owens; two
brothers, Messrs. Joe Carithers
and Nat B. Carithers; one:sister,
Mrs. Pink Patton; 46 grand chil
dren and two groat-grand chil-
dren#
Mr. Carithers was one of Hadl-
unty’s prominent farmers
_ avas a large number of
friends and associates who are
bereaved at hie death.
1225 Commutation Road Tas
now due. Payable at the office
of Tate Wright. Clerk, in ths
Court noosf.—(Adr.)
MARKETS
ATHENS COTTON
Tho local cotton market closed
at 24 1-4 cents Tuesday. Tho
previous dose waa 24 1-4 cent*
nbw York”cotton
Aseoeleted Praea)
TA, Qa.—Approximate-
_ Inoas men from every u. v
„ tl July.'.24.90 2431 24.67 2448 24X6
y Oct..24^8 24J6 24.00 24J2 24.11
_ VBfjSSi of p »»2ooiS'.s“ A -“
for the hard surfacing
a state, bond tsiuc of *7MOOjOuO u n , 0 ^rJUI.
ways.
The bill is intandsd for intro
duction st the next session of the
general assembly In June.
TRAIN WRECK KILLS
FIFTY; SCORES
NBW ORLEANS COTTON
Open High Low Close ,P£
May..24.35 24A* 24^0 2442 3*33
July..24.78 24J7--34JT 24.77 24.62
Oct..2222 24.06 23.70 2393 23.57
II A. M. Bids: May 24.45; July
24.73; October 23J84.
CHICAGO GRAIN .
Open Clou Clou
WHEAT—
14«V 146% 146%
136 137% 136%
128% 139% 128
107% 104% 107%
110% 108% 110%
110% 109% 111%
BENNETT ASKS
RE-HEARING
j OFGASE
(By Assoelsted Prsss) —
ATLANTA, G* -Attorneys for fact of Gamaliel, adorn the bench!
O. R. Bennett, member-elect of and the bar, made rich by hla
the Georgia Public Service Com- wealth of knowledge and hla ran
mission, have asked the state in-
’ io court for a re-hearing in
caw In which Bennett seeks
to obtain Immediate possession.of
the-seat on the eopmlasion |i*w
led by John T. Bolfeuillet.
Clerk E. J. Crawford
Nowe)
The death of Judge Andrew J.
Cobb, «t bis hoe in Athen* re
move* ono of tho ablest Jurists and
most sstlmablo clUiens of Georgia.
All ovsr the state men who ban
sat under his tutelage, as at the .
faculty for imparting it.
**Hia decisions as a. member of
tho Supremo Court of Ceorrfm fer
practically a dffiid <t i are outataod*
ing examples of luminous legal
learning and Judicial acmnan, while 1
bis ecthitiss in the varioqa offices
which ban ^drafted hips • into eerj
J during the olxly-elgbt ynra'
la life have created * standard
• U.
Lea
sojourn at Fort Myers, via., on (eae to tho Confedtraev
i!” '« **- < y* 1 r, jTio^rU^ l f * n<kr ® S
FfOirere. J*r. Crawford reports si. ^..1. Jndra Cobb came
splendid outing and if verted and J tato A heritage of honor and proa-
ready, for tho btrinnttx of tboj^-^ equalled to Georgia,
April term of Superior Court "*>• 2?^aWo to Xto
roatod a -stand
to which -many may strin to
ot few will equal
tbe son of Coo. Howell Cobb
Alexa Weds a Doctor
with any of the previous
1“ waa saM that eone atiracti.\,
shoots will be on the program lur u ,e.
thp asuiung-seasaa, > rl
Oa Us Caolinaad Taswrrpw.j
DAFFODIL CAFE
Wodareday. April 1. 1928.
85c— SPECIAL DINNER -85
Chicken Soup with Rke
Choice of Roast Chicken with
Dressing or
Irish Stow
Turnip Greens Stewed Com
Vegetable Salad
Corn Muffins Biscuits
Egg Cretan!
Coffee, Tea or Milk
59c— SPECIAL SUPPER -39c
Choice of Lamb Chops *-
or Chicken Hash *•
Cream Block Potatoes •
Stewed Apple* Egg Salad
Pineapple Whip
Hot Roll* Bucoits
Coffee. Tea or Milk
aimillunrimsmiA-
Alexa Stirling of Atlanta. G*. women* golf champion, laid a p*t- «pp2*K ,
.ret stymie for Dr. W. G. bus o( Pembroke. Canada, and the dec- tected the pwstn* of woevile la,
tor conceded * b*<l *<*. The) wfiq married in AtWltf N«rrh »
a veneration and eetaom
which, without fortuitioua aid of
3 kind, would havo been deep
taattML
-Men and women in all walk* of
Ufa throughout Georgia deeply re
gret his death." .
A GREAT GEORGIAN I
(Atlanta Georgian)
-When Andrew J. Cobb died In!
Athen* the State of Georgia lost:
a splendid citizen. Of distinguish
ed ancoatry. Judge Cobb lived up
to the best tradition* of bia house; i
and Uw Cobb* and Ladtara an in-,
terWbven for generation* with the.
bravest and best Georgia history.
-Judge Cobb wse an eminent.
lawyer, a cultured gentleman, n
student and a scholar. Patriotic to
bis heart's con, he stood uncom
promisingly for the rights of the
imnrin people. His was a heart
at beat true to them.
-Georgia will miss Andrew J.
Cobb. Mur God rest his met aad
met and gentle soul in peoc*-
ILLINOIS SPEAKER BE
HEARD IN SAVANNAH
SAVANNAH, Gs^-Carieton V.
Washburns, superintendent of the
public scbols of Winnetka, III.,
has accepted the Invitation of ths
I'srent-Teacher Association of
Chatham .county, and Uw Savan
nah Kindergarten, to deliver u
address hen on April 7. Mr.
Washbnme is said to have work
ed out successfully the oWinnet-
ka Plan- whereby every Individ,
ual can progress a* rapidly as
:y will allow.
his ability i
HEAR WORMS EAT
BUENOS AIRES, ...By
You've seen them in
the moviej—the mount
ed police, brilliantly col
ored as scarlet tanagers
—Stoney Indians on In
dian Day Pow-wow in-
the courtyard of the
Banff Springs Hotel-
big bronzed guides who
look romance and talk
adventure.
You’ll enjoy the peo
ple whorlive out hero in
the mountains..'And
you’ll get the thrill of
your life out of the scen
ery. You’ll find good
motor roads in the
Canadian
Pacific
Rockies
and wall marked trails to
fellow oa foot or horseback.
G*
Hinton Securities Co.
for
Loans On City Real
Estate.
-A- i