Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
V-
- Dr. W.W.Brown Joins’
| ' Athletic Staffs Of
“Y” And High Schoo l
& — . —:— ’ % with the hit?best principles has al-
Mfr*Tmnilcu- Athenian Will Bo ready been felt. ■ ..
- |-,a -u* a.1 * L-e Dr - Brown needs no introduction
Loach Of Hoys tn Athenians having: lived here
! ’ v Athletics At Hiffh since boyhood, graduating from
♦ q_i. _-i ' the University of Georgia and the
V OCnOOl. j Medical College at Augusta. At
' - _ —{the University he attained first
. U:\ >7. V/. Brown, well hnovm ranks in athlttics, making his let-
i . J'A't'*ens physician, has been elect- ter in each of the three iriajor
t ©d hoacf coach of athletics for boys branches of the sport, basketball,
t at tho High School and assistant football and baseball.
T^w^, physical director^ at the Young'
-Men’s .Christian Aibociatioii, it
«* w*raa learned Tuesday.
Dr. Brow’s election to the j Jj e made All-Southern in Jiase-
Iligh School and Y. M. C. A. posi- ball* several times, his pitching
tions was accomplished by the nc
Board of Education and Director- f“' nl " s - for .. ^ lm ^gnrtion as
ato of tho Y. M. C. A. According ^.11^1,™,. in tvf. tnnntrv' He
to tho arranfre.'ncnt made he will basebal players in the country. He
to the arrangement made hc/tfill
divide his time be
School and Y: M.
ToK,,r~n th» Ui,X was a basketball player of unusu-
between the H gh a , abmty and with ‘ a „ y of his natur -
(harge of all icy!’ athletes at thf f 1 ^ 1 toient »» » ? ath-
*• '’ „ . • 4 r Iete nc enjoyed the possession of
/ , Sr5Sw«Stwu55‘nf nnrfnr’ those <l ualities of leadership 'which
department of the la-tcz under ; nsn ; rp u: s f e ii ow athletes with the
C.’ W. Jcnec, .physical dirsaior.
. BIG STEP ' ;V V
y -FORWARD
inspire his fellow athletes with the
desire to play the game fairly and
square’y and put everything they
had in their performances. He is a
member of the First Presbyter-
\ x Selection cf Dr. Brown to 'tliis. ian church and for ten years a di-
x work Is considered ene of the Mogb rcotor of the Y. M. C. A. One of
^./orwprd steps cvc r taken i or t.ib -jus many athletic accomplishments
t~." VQ^Dptrent df the boy li'c jin was training of the Y. W. C. A.
: '/"Athens. He/is a natural.leader of basketball teams which won south-
I ^-tfoya 'and coupled with his expen- em championships for several
f KCC an( i knowledge of atale i:s h years.
.■v*Mvr snlen-dd '•horacteif ar*k> h’«; in- Dr. Erown will assume his du-
T^^^-fluence in developing tjie ycung ties in his new capacity within the
> manhood 01 Ain-as in uceo uni>.c next few days.
4^.Poultry Association Plans
To Have 2,000. Of Pure Bred
Chickens In Clarke By Fall
J
m
-—FAUG DEATH HE
Furnish Boys And Girls!
Settings Of Pure Bred i
Eggs.
^PROPOSE DISTRICT i
T WIDE ASSOCIATION j
}£?•
yPlan Considered One Of !
* % Most Constructive Steps!
Taken To Develop Poul
try Industry. j
BELIEVES THAT HE
. (By Hoy Gibbons)
CHICAGO—Condemned to death
for murder, Jame< dmith sits in
rians foj having 2,000 or more his cell here with an inscrutable
pure bred chickens on Clarke
county farms by next fall were
“adapted Tuesday by the Clarke
County Poultry Association.
Ad9ption of this plan is consid-
,£ciCi one oKthc most constructive
|,ihr. < steps toward promoting ^he poul-
m try-industry in th ri country.
*■ The plan was tet farih by E. C.
■ / ^ Paine, president of the u-sodation
' and unanimously adopted by the
- ‘ -association. It is as follows: -
PLAN AS
OUTLINED
1,—The Association will borrow f
$500 from local banks and pur- a changing of the soul’s abode.
^ ^ chase pure bred eggs.
smile playing about the corners of
bin mouth.
Instead, Smith’s laugh is a
laugh of joy!
Because the condemned man be
lieves that after death he is com
ing back to earth again to expiate
his crime, to live a good and use
ful life.
Smith has been converted to the
Brahmin and Buddist' doctrine of
reincarnation, the teaching that
the, soul lives on forever, using
many bodies as its temporary
quarters, that death simply means
! Association will either turn over
Jfco a committee representing the
association an amount equal to
that used in buying the* eggs or
~ "one t>f the best chickens of the
flock. The latter will be sold at
auction following exhibition . at
tho proposed District Fair.
In announcing his plan Mr.
„ Paine declared tjifc farmers are
looking for something to take the
i t placo or at least supplement cot-
- ton as a. cash crop. “Athens buys
DMP.UlOWLCIinOlilS
MEET HERE FRIDAY
The 8th District Parent Teach
er Association will hold (ts first
session in Athens Friday, conven
ing at 9:30 In the forenbon at the
auditorium of the State College
of Agriculture.
splendid program has been
arranged-.for the meeting and a
large attendance Is being urged
by the local associations .
Mrs. Bruce Carr Jones, of Ma
con, state head of the organiza
tion will be here-and deliver the
main address of the morning ses
sion. Mrs. Boyce Ficklen, of Wash
ingtoni Wilkes, will also be In at
tendance. She is chairman of the
district associationi, and will pre-
There was a decline in the price
of local cotton Wednesday. At
the close middling grade was
quoted at 27 1-2 cents a j>ound
which was. half cent under
close on Tuesday. 28 cents.
side over the session
The afteroon session will be giv
en over to round table discussions
Dr. A. M. Soule will deliver
address during the morning ses- ' was barely at a decline of 18 to
sion and Mrs. Clifford Walker, of
Monroe, Mrs. Louis Johnson, and
Mrs. Annie (May Wood Bryant will
speak in the afternoon.
The program of the day is as
follows:
Mrs. Boyce Ficklen, Jr., Chair
man. At State Agricultural Col
lege Athens, Ga., February 2.
1923.
INVOCATION — Dr. S. J. Cart-
ledge.
WELCOME —Dr. Andrew Soule.
RESPONSE.
BUSINESS—Credentials.
Election cf Secretary and Treas
ury.
Appointment of Committees.
Report of P. T. A. (3 minutes
each.)
ADDRESS — Mrs. Bruce Cart
Jones. State President.
LUNCH—At College Cafeteria.
MIDDLING 271~2C
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK — The cotton mar
ket was active and unsettled dur
ing Wednesday’s early trading be
cause of relatively easy Liverpool
cables, rather less favorable re
ports from the Lanchester goods
market and the easier ruling of
foreign exchange. The opening
TALKS—By Mrs. Clifford Walk
er. Mrs. Louis Johnson, airs. An
nie May Bryant
BUSINESS—Report of Commit
tees.
Round table di^tussion on—
NEEDS OF OUR DISTRICT —
Led by Mrs. E. B. Hudson.
Adjournment
.2.—The county farm agent an J j SEES DEATH
1 ‘ < home demonstration agent will se-JAS RELEASE
Jg* Si So, thinks Smith. wh*n he drops
^ S&t mvS ■ Vuatante™ aT lesst L~h the sallows trap-door, his
^ -mJwL suarontco at 1CaSl soul will leave the lump of lifeless
time chickens. clay that Is his body and will en-‘
a-t ju^e ^Xd an W: ^he body of a P^re. new-born
Relation wM tun, oyor H “‘ , ookg upo „ his exccution as
a deliverance from the self that
caused him in this life to rob and
kill.
The crime for which Smith must
pay with his life was the shooting
to death of Frank O Connell,
crippled cigar store clerk, when
O’Connell sought to frustrate the
plans’of Smith anfTthe latter’s , ac
complice, James Butler, to rob
him. "
Butler apd Smith were held
jointly responsible for the slaying,
But Butler received life imprison-
- doobtedly the eggs.you had _ for! sol ^f, w hi. |
“The Impossible Mrs. Bellew,”
Ith Gloria Swanson, is the attrac
tion at the Palace Thursday and
Friday. I bad the pleasure of see
ing this picture at the Howard
Theatre in Atlanta a few weeks
ago where it proved to be one Cf
the best of the season.
In this picture ’Miss Swanson
seems to be at her best injxntray-
ing the role so fitted her unusual
Ability. Her beauty, having a
touch of both the Latin and Orien
tal allurements, is more striking
in this picture than any sbe has
appeared in before.
9* course she is presented in
throwing himself on the mercy of
the judge. ‘'
vou had for lsoldier overseas
• breakfast this mSming came from Snlith confessed his /crime in
y . California * as that Itate sends °.P« n “0^, ^thout a jury tnal,
Sv\ ;millkr.s of eggs weekly to the
l)i s south and east.”
V COMMITTEE
!< 13 NAMED
” In addition to adoption of Mr.
mine's plan a committee on ways
and means for promoting the in-
/' . dustry was named, E. C. Paine,
j Benton, George O’Kelly and
~sJames W. Morton.
Yl,It was decided to co-operate
■5>lth the proposed Athens District
r liFair and make the association
BLAMES
“OTHER SELF”
“I don’t know why I shot him,”
Smith says today. “It wasn’t the
real me, it was my other silf—
Mid Wingfields Howard Scott.. LT*^ thing I count on death to rid
me of.
“That, done, I shall come back to
earth as something good, to wipe
the slate clean. '
Hanging me won’t settle things
’’Northeast , Georgia organization between me and the man-1 killed.
ggSteentualty. Another meeting will After I’m dead I figure I’ll have
: held in! the Chamber orCom- to serve out a long sentence by
lercarroomii Ek*rffary ft fejftpg coming back as a good Jon* in
Vobd of the Agricultural
, at the meeting and dii
poultry industry.
ree Killed In
Boiler Explosion
Monticello Mills
some way or other."
. f3mitb,’s strange belief has arous-
hid keen controversy among cer-
itain schools of religious be
“Should tHs man. be ha
some of them are asking. “Should
TIRt. ft- mtn'a ATdaMitinn a
waits with' shadowed arms to re- agencies.
ceive him.
1 MACON, Ga. — Harvey Jordan
and John Cargile, young . white
'"J men and an unknown negro wero
^instantly killed and four others
‘^rribly scalded when a noiler at
■ saw mill three- miles south' of
"Mofiticello exploded just '«is: tho
mill was beginning work Wjdnes-
•* day'morning. No cause has vet
been ascertained for the explosion
which occurred with such force
that the mill was completely re-1 Miss Mathilde Upson leaves
niolished and bystanders thrown a Saturday for Williams College,
net .ft man's expectation of punish
ment in the hereafter temper the
punishment the state metes out to
mm here?"
But all this finp-spun philoso
phical discussion means nothing to
Smith. ,
He sits daily in the jail death
chamber, not far from the green
ddor behind which the gibbet
Eighty-one different makes of
cars entered ’for display at the
New York auto show.
considerable distance.
| Mass, to attend a house party.
the role of the neglected wife
since this seems to be the favor
ite scheme of her director, and to
give one the thrill of her real
sporting self she hies off to the
one of the great bathing places of
Europe, Deauville, Ostend, tho
Rivera or some place which mat
ters little since it is one of them,
and there that you are struck with
the real Swanson beauty and dash
while her real sol? is revealed at
the close of the picture when sho
is restored to tor family ties.
The picture carries a lot cf;
30 points with May selling of to
27.85 and October to 25.23. Sell
ing of the new crop months was
promoted by reports of further
rains in the belt While there was
active liquidation of old crop de
liveries^ through brokers with
Southern, Wall Street and local
connections. Trade interests were
credited with buying on the de
cline and there also was buying
by brokers believed to be t operat
ing for Japanese account.
Demand failed to broaden in
the midday rally and prices eased
off again during the early after
noon under renewed liquidation
with May selling down to 27.67 or
into new low ground for the day
with the general list showing net
losses of 35 to 52. points.
The early brea**' extended
2776 for May with the general
marked selling about 45 t*> 58
points net lower. Around'and be
low 27.76 for May, there was In
creased demand on scale down or
ders ' part of which seemed to
come from the „rade and prices
steadied up with the market show
ing rallies of 15 to 20 points from
the lowest In the noon hour on
news that the British government
had accepted the. American debt
proposals. Souohern spot advices
were conflicting, reports of freer
offerings comntg from some
sources, while oaher reports indi
cated continuel flrmnesB.
Open High N Low Close^Close 1
Mar. 27.70 27.77 27.39 27.39 27.95
May 27.93 28.G\> 27.58 27.58 28.15
July 27.57 27.60 27.18 27.18 27.77
Oct. 2S.2& 25.39 24.95 25.00 25.43
By HARRY HUNT v,
WASHINGTON — Tho Germans,
known since the beginning of mod
ern warfare as the world’s most
orderly and methodical fighters,
may became the world’s most dis
orderly fighters.
This is the prophecy of experts
of the War Plans Division of tlie
United States army general staff
who have given careful study to
the military situation in Germany.
The intensively drilled Prussian
soldier may become, a sup^r-gue
rilla carrying on irregular fighting
of a type hitherto unknown, they
say.
All this, if Germany, goaded by
French encroachments, decides to
replace its present passive resis
tance with active resistance.
Army regulations prohibit- these
offices from being quoted directly.
But I am able to present a digest*
of the opinions of high officers se
cured in a series of interviews.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
lillSF
IT WILL DE GREAT
F
“Germany knows she cannot
match arms with Franco in- a new
war.” these officers agree.
“She lias no heavy artillery, no
tanks, no aircrafts.
“She has an army of 100.000. al
lowed / by the treaty, and guard
and police forces that might serve
as nuclei for reorganization ol a
considerable part of the old army.
“Granted she has even large
quantities or rifles, machine guns
and even small artillery hidden
away? it is certain she has not no’
and cannot obtain quicklv oeavic
fighting equipment—Artillery, air
planes. tanks—to combat France
along a given jine.
“Also, beyond the Rhine, there
is no natural line of resistance this
side of the Elbe. AmF a stand at
the Elbe would leave more than
half of Germany in French occupa
tion.
“Even should the army of Rus
sia. reputed at 1.000,000. join hands
with Germany, still France would
be military master.
“With a highly organized and
equipped army of 800.000, with
tillery, aircraft and chemical v
fare equipment and material
abundance. France could sweep j
S ARE
BEING MADE HERE
El
t addition to the business
changes announced Tuesday an
other Jarjje improvement is be
ing* mitdo wf>y' Bcrnsteiw Bros.,
furniture dealers and funeral di
rectors,: r
This ilrra hjis taken a long time
lease on tho building next door to
the furniture store; formerly oc
cupied by the ftriffeth Implement
Icompany, and is arranging it into
what is said - to be the finest
funesaK parlors and accessory
on
modeling this building and it will
be complete within a month and
ready for occupancy.
The entfro gngalml' floor of tho
building will’be taken up with tho
parlors and accessory rooms, fur
nished throughout in the latest
equipment and appointments. A
chapel seating 150 .people is be
ing constructed having meqiorial
windows;, aimed, ceiling, church
pews, pulpit- and choir stand while
a colonade and vestUbule will ex-
all thff way across the, front
of tjhe building.
Other rooms fo r
Poses of caskets, ^
ers, furnishings. «
reposing and tho ij kp ani
constructed whil,. n M
rest* room is also
Sleeping qiiaitf’s r
duty at all hours ..f th
be provided a n .i in- \° r ni ^t|
stejn. who has
the department, s
pense cr care is
equipping the plac „„ .
It is expected j, 7,- v
ready for esc ^ j
Tt. is reix>rti*(i j n
Wm. S. Hart nil
screen in March.
Jt - M.
GENUINELY GOOD
IN QUALITY
(VAN-X11, is a synthetic vanilla of rare 11
VAN-NIL GENEROUSLY
,N QiTAxin
SS22323SSS
gorgeous settings and will please
immensely those who revel in to
ciety and glad rag pictures.
- ^ ( —r. w
NEW ORLEANS — Poor cables,
the unfavorable tone of foreign
political news and further rains in
Texas and Oklahoma caused a
general selling fnovement-!\in the
cotton market here Wednesday.
During the first half hour‘of the-
session, the trading positions \#erc
put 29 to 38 points unde* the clos
ing quotations of yesterday. March
fell off to 27.27 and October 24.75
cents a pound.
Heavy selling arose in the after
noon and it appeared to be en
tirely based on an unfavorable
opinion of the situation between
France and Germany. Selling b;
the interior reached importan
proportions and in the trading u;
to 1:30 o’clock prices fell to 27.19
for March, the list showing net
losses of 42 to 46 points.
A vario-br of unfavorable politi
cal rumors widened the decline 43
to 44 points, carrying March off
to 27.23, but toward noon partial
recoveries followed cablegrams
from England to local brokerage
houses claiming that Great Britain
had accepted United States debt
proposals. March rose to 27.49,
whero the list stood 7 to 17 po'.rJta
under the final prices of yester
day. ^ '
Prev.
Open High Low Close Close
Mar. 27.35 27.48 27.09 27.07 27.65
, May 27.35 27.49 27.05 27.05 27.63
■ July 27.19 27.29 26.85 26.89 27.40
Gjfir.any
through Germany
swept through Belgium.
“The German knows f he; futility
of any^attempted general military
resistance.
“But, deprived of materials for/j
his factories, fuel for his homos l
and industries, it is possible even,!
the disciplined stoical German ;|
would reach a stage of frenzy and
desperation which would goad liimj
to open revolt, even in the face of j
recognised military disaster.
In that event German resis-j
tance would doubtless take the i
form of a super-guerilla warfare,
w**h no large concentration of
troops, no battles loughjt to con
clusive victories, - but constant
raids, slashing, jabbing, wearing
down of French resistance, necessi
tatlng the maximum effort by
France to maintain her occupation.
‘Such a situation does not fit in
with German psychology, lie does
not want to invite ruin to his
cities, disaster to his industries.
He likes to fight like lie works, in
orderly, definitely planned me
thod. Only in desperation may
he be .expected to forget the ruin
resistance now would be certain
to bring.
ANOTHER
DANGER
Kidnap Charge
Against Negroes
Henry Horten, your.*g colored
youth and Grace Gardner, colored
woman, had warrants sworn out
against them Wednesday by Tom
Frazier, colored, charging kid-
ping. Ella FlorerJce, 12 year
daughter of. Tom Frazier is
Oct. 24.82 24.97 24.58 24.58 25.04
NEW ORLEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEAN S.—Spot cotton
steady; sales on the spot 638:
arrive 230; low middling 27.25;
middling 28.00; good middling
28.50; receipts 14,649; stock 204,-
694.
Z
alleged to have been abducted by
Horton und the Gardner woman
and later married’ Horton, aC- ;
cording to his story.
Wednesday oldeT members' of :
all the foxfilies' concerned, with
lawyeis, were tiding to get the.
tangle straightened, ouif while the
two youths stood ’ground with ap
parently little concern. unless
the matter is adjusted outside of
court tHh abduction case 7 will be
tried at an early*:'date before one
of tha.. justices o^ the cour.ty.
Form Society On
Children's Laws
ATLANTA, Ga.—Committees on
with the children's code commis
sion and on “treatment and pre
vention <cf crime" to study the
problems Involved in the handling,
of convictions b; courts and pen
al institutions wiH be organized
Jn Georgia it' has been decided by
the Georgia council of social
This action, .seat j taken at a
■fnectlns of tSe association held
in AUanta^esle'jRiy —when 18
state agencies were .represented! time
Secretary* Burr Blackburn out
lined the work for the year, and
prominent state officials ana stale
wdtkers were given prominent
parts on* the program.
LIVERPOOL COTTON
LIVERPOOL — Cotton spot
limited demand; prices easy; good
middling 15.91; fully middling
15.81; middling 15.71; low middling
15.46; good ordinary 14.96; ordi
nary 14.667 Sales 6,000 bales, in
cluding 4,500 American. Receipts
6,000 bales, Including 3,300 Amerl
can. Futures closed barely steady
February 15.21; March 16.16; May
14.98; July 14.744; October,13.73;
December 13.41.
COTTON SEED. OIL MARKET
NEW YORK.—Cotton seed oil
steady. Prime summer yellow
10.85 bid. Prime crude 10.00 ask
ed. Spot 10.85; February 10.85;
March 11.11; April 11.25; Mav
11.37; June 11.40; July 11.51;
August 11.47; September 11.20.
Sales 10,200.
LIBERTY BONDS CLOSED
NEW YORK,—Liberty bonds
closing: Liberty 3’ l-2s 101.54;
first 4s 98.30 bid; second 4s 98.00
bid; first 4 l-4s 98.34; second 1
tchildrer/s laws" to co-operate. l-4s 97.90; third 4 J-4s 98.68;
fourth 4 1-4’s 98.14; uncalled vie
tory 4 3-4s 100.18; U. S. govern
ment 4 l-4s 99.92. *
uncil of ambassadors today
ill be sent to Lithuanian
ding that| within a fixed
all the Lithuanian troops'
and irregulars be withdrawn from
the Baltic district of Memel, tho
former German territory
j ■ % -
Should aBankLoan Money|
for Advertising
\
f By FESTUS J. WADE
President, Mercantile Trust Company of St. Louis
When we strike af advertising, meaning, of course, efficiently
applied advertising! we strike at salesmanship, and the heart of
business. For the banker to do anything to retard business right
now is suicide.
When the merchant pulls down his shingle and waits for busi
ness to come to him in a buyers’ market, we laugh at him, and
call him a poor business man.
» -
When he is forced to cut down one of his best methods of sell
ing because his banker considers advertising an unnecessary
item of expense and refuses an otherwise deserved loan purely on
that principle, it is my humble opinion that we should laugh at
the banker, and feel sorry for the merchant.
Don’t mistake my meaning. It is a basic banking principle
that a loan must be well secured, and a firm cannot borrow
merely because it is a big and successful advertiser.' But the
fact that.iMs a believer in advertising and wants to yse a por
tion of the money for that purpose should never stand in its way
when it calls on the Bank’s credit department.
(Published by the Banner-Herald in co-operation with
The American Association of Advertising Agencies.)
The big danger in event French
pressure drives Germany to open
revolt—unlikely as we believe that
—is not in the situation that would
result simply between Franco anjl
Germany.
“From a purely military stand
point, France today could hanilo
the situation even if Russia should
join with Germany.
“But should Russia joi’’.
Germany, then Poland world. lock
interests with France.
“Rumania and Czcclio-Slovakia
would shortly be drawn in, and
we would have again the spark of
war running t'.:rousn v the whole
chain of Under-box gov- rmnents
in Europe—Italy, Greece, Turkey,
Bulgaria—no one cyrjld foresee
where it would stop.”
Give Your Business a Tonic of
Newspaper
When your motor car climbs a hill you give ’er
a little MORE gas.
FRANCE ISSUES ULTIMATUM
Press.)—A Strong note equivalent f a t ^aul al Audley"’^'S^EbOT-
hart, R. A. Woburn, T.’o/toder-
Jury for the February term
the City court which convenes on
the 19th, was drawn Wednesday
and Is as follows:
A. G. Haughey, W. TVEtoertaart,
A. M. Burch, G. A. Doster, Geo. T.
Watson, T. P. Stanley, C. A, Tal-.
madge, T. S* Seagrpyes, >V. E.
Johnson, J. F. Taylor,' C. F. Reaves
A. C. Bishop, J. H. Mapp, Gray
Hopkins, A. P. Whitehead, J., J.
Fowler, L. P. Crawford, W. T.
Florence, G. O. Davis.
M. M. Arnold, W. M. Aslie, C.
G. Parnell, H. E. Martin, L. G.
Crawford, H. J., Parham, H. D.
•Morbut, G. S. Crane, W. M. Hart
man, Ross Creekmoore, W. B.
Hodgson.
E. A. Cook, C. B. Daniel, Billups
Phinizy, H. T. Edwards;
der all:
vaded.
L*d jyotection, recently
R. A. Washburn, T. G. Andc
auu, F. M.,HailesvC. E. Martin, J.
BokeriWipn, H.-K. -ttnmsey, R. L.
Callaway.* titigBm
B. J.'Smith, W. T. Lester, J. L.
Morris, J. IT. Couch, R. R. Hodg-
- ■ son, T. F. Comer, J. H.' Towns, D.
- J A. Wat'••on. M. K. I'.ri ; •. M. I.
When the sweet com and ’taters in your gar
den don’t thrive, you give them a little MORE
care—more water—more fertilizer.
“ When your volume of business falls short of
what you desire, stimulate your sales through
classified advertising.
Advertising is the fire under the boiler of
business. * 1
Classified advertising requires hut a small in
vestment.
Call 75 and dictate your ad, and talk the sub
ject over.
The Banner- Herald
“The Paper With the Want Ads”
in- P:
r