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PACE FOUR
mm THE BANNER-HERALD
ATHENS. GEORGIA.
Poblbhed Ivtry ETening During the Week
today and on Sunday Homing by The Atkana
"■ i Georgia
HAKE B. BRASWELU ..
■. 1. BOWE
CHARLES K. MARTIN ■
.NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVB8
L:H. Eddy-Company. New York, r»rk-Uxlngton B«H
nniliilm Boeton. Old 8outr MUgfe
MEMBER OF'THE ASSOCIATED FRBSSH^H^H
The Aieoelated Press ii exclusively entitled to ith* «*• &»
Seation of all new* dispatches credited to it ot nrt otterwire erased
b the neper, and alio the local newe publlehed therein. All ngkte
ed republicanon of special dispatches alioreserved.
Address all Businese Commnnicatione direct to_the Athens ]
Ing Company, not to individuals. JNswi articles intended for ]
Hon ebon
addressed to The Banner-Harald.
THOUGHTS FOB THB DAT
Render therefore to all their dues.—Romans 13»7,
Ajtender conscience is a stronger obligation than a
prison. . " \
VJUNIQUE DEPARTURE FOR RAILROADS. *
i The announcement by the various railroads of the
country that on and after March 1, 1929. they would
i take*over the. express business and operate it under
railroad management is a departure that will be pf
general interest to the people. During the past few
1 years, under an act ol congresfe, tne railroads carried
! on the business of the express companies during
• which time it is alleged the railroads have been heavy .
lose*-?. But, be that as it may, the Officials have de-
1 cjded that there is money in tne express business ancj
from the first cf March, this lino of business will he.
conducted absolutely by the railroads. > \
f , Commenting on the proposed change of operation
| of the express business, the Pennsylvania Grit, says: <
“After losing $40,000,000 during the last, eight
i years'carrying merchandise for the American Rail,
way Express Company, authorized by act of congress
to carry on the business of the various express com
panies surrendered to the federal government in
1918,..the railroad companies have announced that
they Intend .conducting the express business thorn
s' selves beginning March 1, next, when contracts with
the American Hallway Express Company expire.
• “The express business is a big one tor the railroads
, to take over. It has 16,000 offices,. 100,000 em-
; pioyees, and does an anne .1 gross business of $300,-
, 000,000. But the steadily increasing effectiveness
cf our huge railroad systems make it probable .that
i not only they but the public as well Will benefit by
£ the change.” ...
Railroads are growing more democratic in their
I’ policies dealing with the public through expansion
• in other lines of a public character. Already they
furnish transportation by rail, air, water, trucks and
busses, besides operating restaurants, investment
\ companies, stores, insurance organizations and in
some instances banks, Now with the taking over of
T the express companies, their field of operation will be
j greatly strengthened and developed. The railroads
arc great developers and builders;* they should be en-
l couragcd in the fullest without encroaching' on the
rights «f the people, and in all legitimate enterprises
! calcujhted to benefit the public* legislative bodies
1 should pursue a most liberal policy towards them.
J REFORESTATION OF LANDS.
' - The tvhdle nation.is being aroused over the neces- .
«ity • of ‘reforesting .the idle lands of the 1 countiV.
During the past decade the country has silffered from •
the wood anil, lumber bandit, so iruch that the con-'
dition has, been brought home to our people and the
great danger of devastation is pictured as a reality.
In many of the states the officials in co-operation
, with tho forestry associations are taking active steps '
not only to reforest the lands, but to .plant millions of
1 seedling trees. In New Jersey and New York tree
i planting has bfeen taken seriously and millions of
trees have been plnntcd. Last year, in Now York,
approximately 25,000,000 trees were put out, of
’ which 5,000,000 were planted by the state authori-
, ties; In Georgia, the forestry association and tho
Georgia State College of Agriculture, hove contribut
ed $iuch to the plan cf reforestation and to the en-
1 cousagement of the people to co-operate. The state
has,adopted a most liberal policy towards the agen
cies! interested ‘in the restoration of forests. Trees
] arc (being planted and conserved in a most careful
manner; thousands of acres of idle land have been
cultivated and'trees planted. Advocates * of forest
[ preservation have accomplished much in this state.
The field is yet undeveloped and before another re-
cadfe has passed, it is believed that Georgia will be
/ one: of the leading states in forest preservation and
cultivation.
, A PARK SYSTEM FOR ATHENS.
Alderman Henry T. Culp, candidate for the legisla-
• ! turq, in a signed statement, published Thursday, ad-
, yoeftes a proposed system of small parks for Athens.
; As an official of the city, Mr. Culp pledges his efforts
to tjic cause and declares that he is in favor of the
pity. officials making annual appropriations for this
] purpose until a sufficient amount has been accumu-.
. lated to provide for ample small park accommoda-
f jtionfe for thip city. If it becomes necessary for legis-
l lative enactment to authorize the mayor and council
l' to jpake such apprepriatiens, he pledges himself, m
„ case of his election to the legislature, that he will in-
; troijuce and support such a measure,
I |W« plan as proposed by Alderman Culp appears
G to be feasible and one that would enable the city of-
t fic-ijls to provided parking system that would mean
| much for future generations. No city can hope to
glow and prosper without a parking system. It is a
}■ ■doty* the officials and tax-payers owe to the children
i to. provide places- where outings can be held and
! games and other forms of outdoor exercises can be
indulged in, especially by children. The suggestion of
,t A Merman Culp is. one that should attract the at- •
< jfSitQon of the public and receive its hearty co-opera-
tion; and suppoT!?
ft fljic boll weevil has not made its appearance in any
, • degree of seriousness to the cotton crop during the
ji recent rains. If the advent of this pest is delayed
■i for ten days longer, it will not make any difference
f as to the number that may enter the fields. It will bo
too late for damage; the crop will he beyond the dan-
11 ger line from the weevil.
Uncle Ned, says: “Ise been votin’ the ’publican
ticket all my life and I ain’t gwine to change and
^ vote that ‘Hoover-Democrat’* ticket. The 'publicans
are good enough for me.” . ,
WE BANNEK-HEEALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA
A Daily Cartoon:
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7.H&28.!,
‘We Had a Rendezvous With Death!”, JSSS,'?«!&?*
DID IT EVER OCCUR
TO YOU ?
A Little of Bverythlng and No
Much of Anything.
By HUGH ROWB
which forces sightseers and resl-
«• -nts to U8o the sidewalk. It fa a
deplorable condition and could be
remed'ed at a small cost to tho
municipality.
ATHENS TEN YEARS AGO
September 7, 1918
Cotton: 34 1-2 cents.
Weather; Probably showers to
night and tomorrow.
By Associated Press: Accelerat
ing the fight of the retreating
Germans, the British, French and
American armies ga’ned Important
new ground last night and today
along the entire front from tho
The New York Herald Trib
une, of recent date, paid a
splendid tribute to Governor Al
Smith, defending Him from at
tacks made by William A.
White, of Kansas. The Herud
Tribune, ssldi
._ _ ..... . . . “tong me enure irunt irum
Governor Smith s righteous indlg- A ls n e to the west of Cambral.
nation at thejblnndering Whltoj American Headquarter* in
charges will fnd an echo in the 'i,Y anC e: Tho outstanding event of
heart of every fair minded citizen.' tho week 0n tho American front
How tho normally m.ld and gen : has been the passage of the Vesle
orpu* editor from Kansas came and tho carrying of the line for-
to moke such hasty and unfounded ; ward to tho border of tho Alsne,'
accusations has been a mystery W itB American Army in.'
•to hla friends. To link Governor' prance: v German aviators scored
Smith's -name with vico was a two dlwct Wla Wednesday nlglU
cruel slander utterly at odds alike | 0n tho Iarg0 «Red Cross” between
with his. personal Ufo us with his
official career
, Editpr Rainey, of the Daw. ,
son News, one of the beet
edited newspapers in the
; 8out*n analyzes the attacks on.
Governor At 8irffth ;fn a most
thorough manner. Here is ths
way in which Editor . Rainey
alzea up the situation:
‘♦To talk about. T?mjnany. as a
reason for l?e*ng agWnit Governor
8mlth is to biamo the governor
for - things that happened . before
he was born, or while he wa* de
veloping the character which mado
m the best governor Now Yprk
has ever had ond that state's
interesting personality. It
cates either a paucity of ideas
purpose to dodge tho real issues
of the present campaign.*'
tho wings of the French-Amer 1
can hospital southwest^of 8olu-
son*.
London: General demoraliza.
tfon of tho German Population and
widespread and jrow.ipg disaffec
tion In the German arnty, accon/-'
pan’od by mutiny and desertions
aro described In a dispatch to the
Da'ly Telegraph from Its Rotter
dam correspondent under date M
Thursday.
According to the estimate sent
out by tho selective service of
ficers Athens and Clarke county
should register 2,602 men on Sep
tember 12th. ?
M ss Ruth Mtddlebrooka has ar
rived safely overseas. She is con-
« « -..-o. nected with tho hospital unit or-
It Jndl- ganlzed by Dr. Stewart Maguire of
Richmond, Va.
Miss Ruth Boik. of Atlanta, la
the guest of Mrs. T. E. Scott.
Thrso members of the Cof
fee Drinkers Club hav# called.,
a meeting for Saturday morn
ing at eleven o’clock for the
purpose of investigating th*
financial eonditoin of ths elub.
Tbe members interesting them
selves in the Invest'gatton are
Dink Martin. L. D. Bentor. and
e W. Joiner. ,lt t» under-
that charges will be prefer
red against the former officers, E.
O. Gklley ad Asa. 8. Thornton
M%a Josoph'no Nicholson loft
yesterday for Atlanta to visit Mrs
Woodward at Inman Park.
Program At Palace
Extremely Good;
Kids Great
“Four Walls" at the Palace The
atre is a splendid feature film
with John Gilbert and Joan Craw
j AROUND ATHENS
t By T, LABJBT GAJVTT
The following memories of three
famous Georgians by T. S. John
son, of Jackson county will bo A
Interest to all readers of I he Dan
j'or-He raid- 'there are .i number
of old c' U'-’n^ now living in Ath
ens and adjoining country, like
R. B. Mathews, of Lexington, a he
HSurd tho speeches lufemui to Mr.
Johnson, who is a ,iaU*,e of Ogle-
thoipe coumy aay.i. «.
i( “I can never forgjt the little
frn'l form that for six hours at
Lexington, In Oglethorpe County
~porg!a, pleaded, prayed and
ept, begging Georgia not to se.
; saying that the enemy would
the flower of tho South with
hired butchers; that they woulc
overpower us. He begged Georg
tans to stay in the Union; to tight
If they had to f'ght, under tholi
fathers’ Hag. Like a prophet
Alexander H. Stephens rfpoke; how
true it all cable to-pass! Thnnl
God his'statue Is row In the r.a-
HalLof Fame. \ - •
"How Well I remember tho fnan
dy form of Gen. Robert Toombs
with his curled locks upon hir
shoulders, said to bo one of the
most gifted orators of America.
It Is said of him before the 60‘*
that he'would hold the Unite*
States* Senate spellbound with b'.f
eloquence. I remember the man
ly form and wonderful oloqtienc*
of the gifted Generals Howell Cobb
and T. R. R. Cobb. Gen T. R. R.
Cobb mado the statement that h*
would drink all the blood spllle*
and oat ail the dead bod'es. ’
heard a friend of mine, who was In
command, say that when they were
carrying Gen. Cobb off the field tc
die when an artery *n hla thlgP
had been cut, the btood spurting
at every beat of tho heart, he
thought, “Poor fellow! To ge*
us to secede you said you wouY
dr'nk all the sp’lled. anc
now you are giving your own.*'
iMr. Thomton ban been absent f ord playing the leads. It. is ex
from the city for several weeks, tremeiy numan and was seen *by
He was last-heard from lo Mexico.
81 nee that time, however, no news
has been received from him which
has caused more or less anx'ety
on the part or the ‘members who
had payed their annual dues in
large crowd Thursday night,
while the.. “Our Gang” comedy.
"Bamum and Ringfing” is a
scream and tops all the pictures
the kids have ever made accord*
ing; to tho verdict rendered by
advance. Mr. Benton, it is alleged' many of those who saw it Thun-
the mov.'nf spirit in the invest!-, day.
gatlon. Henry Jackson and John • he same program is on at the
Griffeth are now audting the ac-: Palace Friday night and it is eer-
couts of the club and expect to.tainly worth seeing.
In Sooth Carolina
W. T. Wilkin., brother of Joha
Wilkin*, of thi* city, died Thur*
day at Kinjrstrcc, S. C. Ml»» M*ry
Wilkin* *nd Mr. Sum Wilkins left
Athens Thursday night to attend
the funeral there.
BUG POISON KILLS BOY
BRELLE. N, J. — Fumes from
Insect po'non sprayed on row
bushes 1. he'd responsible tor the
death here of John Douglas Rus
sell, 3. eon of Mr. and Mrs. Carl L.
We hope every dairyman In tbh
section will attend tho opening o'
Wilkes county creamery end heal
Prof. J. Phil Campbell's address.
County Ageo! Whoolfs of 'th's oc
casion: "It will be only a oborl
time now before the Wilkes count}
creamery will have Its doors open
for your cream. It Is expecsoc
that every farmer In the county
will attend the opening exorcises
Th's Will be a feature day foi
Wilkes county.
We will also have have a ren'
treat In atore for those who lakt
advantage of visiting tho openin,
day exercises. Mr. J. Phil Camp-
—T. N. M. hell Director of the Extension
W _ . - ■ w«rk in Georgia, who has boon
. T Wilkins Dies- * \extremely Interested In the
>1. TT llrvllla 1/ICS Wilkes County Creamery, and 4s
giving every possible assistance,
wilt make tho opening addreee.
Mr. Campbell has lust returned
from a trip to tho old world. Hol
land and Denmark have made
themselves famous with their co
operative dairy work and especi
ally their cooperative creameries.
We have the opportunity to learn
from Mr. Campbell Just what he
saw and heard firat-hand from
these people. At one time Den
mark end Holland were Jnst about
bankrupt; necessity forced them
to cooperation, and now they are
iA Fool there was and h*
hitched Ms star
(Evan as you and I)
To a aeeond.hand bus all mud
and tar—
Ws called It a Joke tl\st had
gent too far.
But th* Fool, ha caVtd It hi*
motor-car.
(Evan as you and I.)
.—Advocate.
The nine far the pest few
Bays hav*caused man{citi«ns
to renew their objections to
the honghs of trees overlap,
ping the sidewalk, l n many
sections at th*' city.
The reaelgrat'on I* not Immune
this nustence. -'No Man's
Land" is lined with shade trees.
blessing during the summer
month*, bnt a menace to pedes.
triaM daring and phortly attar
th* rains. A tne trimming cam
paign should be inaugurated by.
the municipal authorities an^ pro- — —■ - — —■■■■ isrmers I —4is ...
teetton given to those who are tore was unsuccessful and Milton j T eteh and to hav* county a*~nts
f “teed to traverse the sidewalk*, pleaded guilty to a charge of house | members of the extension aerVJce
The tre'ln through th's historic breaking. Annette had f/il’ed In and experiment station staffs, snd
section of the city are impessabfs her Job aa lookout. . . . | Farm Bureau -representatives, ex-
became ill shortly after playing
near the newly sprayed bushes,
snd died before an antidote could
be effectively administered.
T A HOLDUP HONEYMOON
CINCINNATI. — annetta had
been married only a few dare
whan bar husband, Milton Btden-
Russell of Rutherford. The boy tmo of the moat prosperous little
countries *'n the world. We wCl
be extremely Interested In hear
ing about this work from iMr.
Campbell.
A Hairy Vetch campaign la now
on *n all th* bounties over the
•ns territory. The rampe'gn
uded farm tour*, field meeL
hola, introduced her Into the •<w < ,)ngs and other gatherings for
fricsctea of hi* business. The ven-i farmers to see results of hairy
1L
County Agent.Wheel!*, of Wilkes
has this to say about the value of
vetch;
“We have (be lowest price on
vetch seed that we have had ln
three years. Every farmer should
he getting In his vetch seed now.
He will want some to sow with
oala, but of vastly more Import
ance he should sow a large amount
of vetch for fertiliser for hla next
years com. We all know how
hard It Is to pay for fertiliser In
the spring, and with th!* vetch
to be turned under Just about time
't Is ready to br*im In the spring,
we can make a wonderful crop of
corn without sodo or any other
Nitrate. Not only this, but the
lund will ho much hotter for cotton
or any other crop the next two
years. We cannot use vecth to be
followed Immediately by cotton be.
cause It comes off too late In the
spring.”
^SyjJnneJlustin i«uF«amxM.,
happy-go-lucky, laughing,
“Let's leave the car here, Dad,*
said Tony, “and walk down the
hill like we used to when we
weren’t sure tbe brakes would
work." She had turned into the
drive of the farmhouse at the top
of the steep hUl at the bottom of
which ran The Glens, the loveliest,
coolest, leafiest spot ! n the world.
“Righto, girt,** said .pat, clamb
ering/ out and making the gro
tesque little gesture pf unraveling
hla legs which he always d'.d alter
being in Tony*» car.
The farmer's wife, came into the
yard as ahe always had ln the
years past. She hed on what look-
ed like the same faded calico house
dress.
There was no recognition in her
Cftce, Only awe for the shiny road
ster. the beautirul girl in her chic
sport clothes, and tin big man.
’Please,” smiled Tony, “may we
The boll weevil seem to be
spread'ng and Increasing In num
bers in all the counties around
Franklin than any other county - . ,
Athens. The past seems worse in f loara the car here while we walk
in our section. County Agent. down the hMf*
Wheelis has this to say about th«*J “Th® m ®n folks'll be pom!ng in
weevil i n Wilkes: I with tho -team pretty soon,” said
“We can easily lose a crop of I woman, “don't know whether
cotton now. A farmer was in the I they can get around It or not.*’
County Agents office as this paper Tony; opened her purse end
la going to press with bolls prac-1 tucked a bill Into the woman's
tically grown, and every lock 1 dirty hand. “1 think they can
ruined. These boEs acme out of» m»nagc # »! she said coldly,
cotton that has not been dusted! 4 T shouldn't get angry at un-
or sprayed this year. .There has grsc'ousness like that!” sa'd Tony
recently been a heavy drop of
small bolls and squares, duo to
the excessive rains. Th's leaves
little else for the boll weevK to
feed on but the bolls. Unless we
k'll this crop of weevils that are
out, we can count on them
getting our bolfs. A couple of
good jobs of dusting right now
may save your cotton. Bxamlne
your cotton closely, and then use
your Judgment.*'
Is the crucial time as to
boli v weve'l infestation In north
Georgia. -
In south Georgia the drfnger has
practically passed except in sec
tions where planting was late.
But the board of entomology
reports that tho weevM la a great
er menace today than In five years,
in sect'ons not beyond Us control.
The remedy is calcium arsenate
and ldje^lve cultivation.
Many farmers, whose cotton but It Ja thought that ihey would
crops from a foliage standpoint,* have virtually the same effect.
aa she started down the hill,
matching her stride to Pat's
swinging one. “A life like lhat’d
make anyone surly. Pat. why Is
•!t that some of us get all the
breaks?"
Pat took her arm at that and
squeezed It.
“Do we, Tony? Sometimes I
think that the people other people
envy for thinking that they 'have
aK the breaks' are as wretched as
people living in poverty and stu
pidity.''
Tony, looked up startled. B'g,
less Pat was phUosop
There was wistfulness in i
and almot a tremble in his'
voice. Hla Land tighten
arm as he said:
"But I'm, gtad that you
ting breaks,' Tony. I have
so sure that you were! A
Talbot business, Tony-
ttwfuliy sure?”
Tony hesitated. What and how
much should sho toll? Wfj
anything definite
A father took
vague feelings,
she ttfd Put that i
she wanted to marry Diek«4ind
that she, was petrified by.AiiO-ao-
nouncement and the family.clu^k-
Ings about tho matter, rat would
see to It that‘she didn't fb on>
with It, that was all! And wliat’a
mess that would bej ' ii »i v
No. sonffehow the conversation
must keep awny from OMf' "flis'
didn't know what to say. !‘T6ny
hesitated. Finally—
“Look, Dad. there's that dranjfS
milk weed that we used'to find in
that lot! Oh. wouldn't It* be Glor
ious in a Hack Jar in* the 'shn
room against those nasturtium
curtains? I'm going after It!” and
Tony had vaulted over thh old
rai fence and was standi htt ( %Aee
deep In rfummor clover, breaking
off the flory blossoms. 1
Pat crawled over the feneb,' tbo,
and helped pick the flowers with
her. . -, .
“Gee, this Is great, Tony—noth-
InK like a return trip to a pUce
you knew whb n you were utteVy
care-free, /s there? ^Romejhwr
tho Fourth of July when WO h«d
the picnic supper down herd ifilfhb
Inflow and Peg sat in tHd <ake
and how she howled?"
NEXT: £at, the modern father.
Message To Senate
On Kellogg Peace
Pact Expected To
End Historic Stand
(Coatlsatd trass nans jaa.)
look good, do not think seriously
of tho weevil menace.
F\*r (three cj- four years the
weather conditions have heon so
It was held unlikely that tho
message would go so
Tsir ss to suggest cooperation —•••
the League under this plan.
favorable that weevil emorgence the state ^department it was fndl-
was negl'gible. But not so this cated that' Air. Coolldge would not
QAL—2-AROUND ATHENS' ... j| mention the League because of the
year. And this. 1*:the moment of. fear that such mention might be
crisis-- * * * ,‘ ,... .*. . ’.l/nterptetad.as; bid Mgr. member,
— I ship in the Geneva body.' ■'
("aVgmg'K | Col. E. A. Schiller
' Visiting In Athens
(Continued from page one.)
Boyeton Record **ys!
are undor way for em'argl
ilea at IFoplar Spring* Camp
around for net year.
The revised plans call for a
homo to ho used by a tenant to
cultivate the campground lands
,nd look after the property, a hotel
and a concrete curb'ng for the
iptlngs, and botlev highway and
parking faclilt'es around th|»
grounds,
to date and one that broke all
records in Atlanta last sprihg.
Col. Schiller hat scores of warm
personal friends in Athena, and
.. hundreds throughout the state. He
These will be, carried was a member of* the governor’s
jut perhaps by next year and the ,t,ff while n resident of Atlinta,
good work of the camp-meetings and is also well known in Georgia
hla way back from a second west
ern trip. *■•■■■ "
Favorable reports have come:to
Democratic headquarters from. Ne
braska, where Democratic* chances
nrn iVd to be goad because of
farm dissatisfaction*
Rivers, Hardman *
Managers Charge
Rival Candidate^
With “Disloyalty”
(Continued from page one.)
ax to whethet or not he stated 'that
h« .would “vo\e for thO-Hblkckest
negro ih Georgia before he wou’d
vote for Al Smith.” Much resent
ment is felt in that section be
cause oi an alleged expression ^ot
preference for the • mountain* peo
ple by Rivers. <J »
* Charging that \ Eugene - Tal-
msdge is “incompetent, dictatorial
end mcnta'Iy and temperamentally
unfit” to serve ns Commissioner
of Agriculture, G. C, Adims, ; of
Newton, invited the peonte "of
Georgia to attend the Talmadgo
speaking engagement and “se© for
themselves.”
At the regular weekly fttneheon
of the City Club, Thomci M. Un
der, assiztant commissioner'of Ag
riculture, spoke in (behalf '©f'Otm- #
misnfoncr of Agriculture Tel-*
madge's campaign for re-election.
Linder epoko imtead of Tahnadge,
who was unable to accept ah invi
tation extended him by the club 1 on
account of other engagements. The
**r.sistant commissioner praised
Talmadgc's record si agricultural
commissioner. ^
Replies to a nuestioTymhft-sent
to alumni of the Colutnnia^ijnl-
vrrsity Law School chow the high
est yearly income of a. graduate
to be $50,000.
BENSON’S i
CAKE SALE FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY <
35c Pound Cake for . 27c
35c Layer Cake for 1 ;. 27c
Fresh and like the home-
folks make.
BENSON’S, INC.' 1 ’',
, _ JUST FOR FUN CON-
lot organised is South Carolina, t and then through the middle wo*t TEST starts SltUrdaV,'
shere the RepUtlican vote or tnto Mlasourl, also cie'med by c , o.i, iv^nBnh’u
■mounts to little. the Democrats, and through tho September Sill, licnson S
The Hoover leaders have been southern border states of tho mfd- Richer Bread COUPON in
neouraged by thaw private ad-idle wee). He plan* to cover all « j ,|t _ vn |„|_ in full
rices, but they are making no 1 this territory during the campaign j breaU Will explain in lull
laims officially upon any of the but *Jt .1* believed he will strike Saturday.
.the border states Just before tho niP'WCfYN , Q TMf’ \
wind-up in the east, probably on libl'IBUi'l O, llvy. ;
po itical circles. He was given n
cordial welcome in Athens Thurs
day. and will be entertained exten
sively while here. •
Smith To Stress Power,
Farm Issue, Prohibition
In His Western Tour
(ConUraed from Pag* One)
will go on. Poplar Springs Camp
around was established is 1835
and annual meetings have been
Hold there almost continuously
,'nce.
From the Royston Record: "Tho
Jew Preacher wilt lecture on Ro
man Catholicism at the tent Mon
day night after he Camp Meet.
Ins in over at Franklin Springe.
Coalition Of Republicans,I
\nti-Smith Democrats is until September 30, op which date
Underway In Five States
(Continued froa Paw O—) the'coi'ronlten'he his
l.mocrata and the Republlcana I New Vork campaign formally whh
viT 'e aWe te eonreiidite by vot- *" «PP«1 to atet. democratic lead.
n he ,0 «hcme“”l«!Sy °h.'. 1 ' C ^™n ^Smlth may proe^d directly from
dopted in Georgia »»d Alabama, Honjerjo
,nd is contemplated in Texas. »n address In California, Herbert
oiuisiana and North Carolina, ae-1 HooveF. home state, but his
ording to personal retiort* the crowded schedule la llkcly tu pro-
endidate ha. received. In Florida vent thafoutjey to the west coast,
republican slate ha. been n.raadl Akelkwthte route, hack from
id in Mlssiwippl there will be;Denver would rarry Governor
three slates. 8n,lth northward for speeches In
The only southern state ih whieh 1 Montana and Wisconsin which
he anti-Smith Democrat* have | Democrat* leaders are cfa'mlng,
upon any
outhern states. They say frank-
* they do not know how mueh
ic can expect out of the southern
Ituation.
The nominee finished the first
■raft of hi, Newark speech Fri-
Icy. It runs more than 6,000
vords and ii nearly as long as his
uceptence address. It will require
ifty minutes for delivery. It is
devoted chifeiy to an amplification
>f Hoover’s labor position.
.Hoover will icava here at noon,
September 17, arriving in Nawark
at 4:30 p. m. Th* speech wUl be
lalivered in the armory at 1 p. m„
Eastern Standard time. Hoover
vneeta to remain in Nawark over
night, returning to .Washington
the next day.
HE MUST LIKE SCHOOL
MEXICO CITY.—Mcxlcb’s star
hiker 4* on an 3,000 mil* walking
tour to school. His Itinerary calls
for a stroll to New Vork Q|ty and *
s return hike as fkraa Los Angeles j
where he will be awarded a achol-.
arahlp to th* University of Illinois •
by th* National University ot
Mexico. {
rifle
eY« k*own. .
"Iwoii’tdoif
-said Mrs. Boros
“I refuse to p»y OO ceM* for
m haif-Nnt of any liquid
Insect-killer when I can get
the same quantity of Black
Flag for only 90 cent*.”
Black Flag Liquid Is one-
half the price of other liquid Insect-killers.
And It Is the deadliest made.(Money hack ir It
doesn’t prove so.} Black Flag comes In two
forma— Liquid and Powder. Both are sure
death to Alec, mosquitoes, roaches, ants, bed
bugs, fleas, etc. Powder, IS cents and tip.
O 1923, B. V. C..
"A * \