Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday afternoon, February 2, 1921.
111
EMPLOYEES OF CINCINNATI
CONCERN VOTE TO TAKE VOL
' “ ' , dv V , '
UNTARY VACATION,IF NECES¬
SARY IN ORDER TO HELP
THOSE BADLY IN NEED OF
V
EMPLOYMENT.
\
CINCINNATI, O., Feb. 2.—Snce
employees of the A. ■hjpsh^o., a man¬
ufacturing concern of this city, voted
to take a voluntary vacation if neces¬
sary to give work to unemployed there
have been further developments in
this business which is being run on
the Golden Rule basis. Mr. Nash out¬
lined today these recent steps.
‘‘Business men of Chattanooga,
Tenn., have become so interested in
results obtained by application of the
Golden Rule to this business that they
have subscribed stock to open a Ten¬
nessee company.
Employees of the Cincinnati fac¬
tory Have bought into ownership to
the extent of $50,000 since opportun¬
ity was given them in January.
u Arrangements have been made to
conduct classes in business manage¬
ment and economics for employment.
a Business has expanded so much
since employees presented their peti¬
tion proposing they take a vacation
that a new shop has been opened.
“This growth has employed a large
number of men out of work with the
reopening of activity for the spring,
the need of Nash employees stepping
out to make room temporarily for
others has passed. ft
Mr. Nash said he had salesmen in
many other cities and that the goods
of the firm were sent to nearly every
State in the union.
I am not interested in this busi¬
ness simply form the standpoint of
production, but from seeing what re¬
sults can be obtained when everybody
works from the basis of doing to oth¬
ers as he would have done by," Mr.
Nash said. “I am not interested in
making money. I have already more
than I ever dreamed of having, In
fact I am worried about the money,
for I have seen to many irhnes com¬
mitted under the shadow of wealth.
That the Golden Rule pays in the
operation of a business I think has
been demonstrated in ours.
it No other manufacture
the results that can produce
they know our workers do, when
they are working for them
selves and for the good of others
around 1 them.
it Increased output
of course would
not count and we would have broken
up if we had not had the business.
Hut the Golden Rule works there too.
It has gotten us the business. Through
the period of depression as well
through the as
period of high prices we
have kept right on growing.
it Incidentally
we have written int»
the character of the Chattanooga fac¬
tory that it shall be co-owned by the
workers. The men who subscribed
stock I insisted should bive themselves
in a measure to the work.
u We have treated °ur customers
we would , be as
treated. So the chain of
the operation of the Golden Rule has
completed itself.
Mr. Nash was ordained a minister,
but after a short experience in this
field gave it up abruptly, and took to
labor at whatever he could find to do.
For a time he carried a hod.
V „
LIN®TYPE OPERATOR
MAKES NEW SPEED RECORD
SUMTER, S. C„ Feb. 2.-Making
a speed record a sixteen-year-old lin¬
otype that had been seen continuous
service, part time in day and night
shifts, was the unique achievement of
Frank Patton, machinest operator of
the Sumter Daily Item in winding
the old Patton’s up
year. performance
consisted of setting 3,114 lines of sev
en-point type, 13 ems on an eight
__. point , slug, , few minutes
in a less than
six hours, or an average of 619 lines
an hour, on an old model No. 3 lino¬
type, erected in 1904. There was no
fat or pick-ups or any sort in the
which was run-of-hook copy
local consisting of
news. Associated Press pony re¬
port correspondents, and reprint, part
of it typewritten and part of it man
script in handwriting. Type-setting
experts have classed Patton as MM
among the fifst three speeders of the
entire country as his hourly aferage
of figures in company with the best
speed records ever made in this coun¬
try over a period of several h Kirs and
especially in 7-point composit on.
ti uef* Concerning Teeth.
There are curious fnneies about
teeth. To dream ahem teeth was held
to be a warning that enrrow wns at
hand, and It was still more unlucky
to dream of one’s teeth falling out
Many people still throw an e * trttC *®”
fire for luck, and thi’m -
tooth into the of
la observed apedaily in the case
young children to ensure that the re¬
mainder of their teeth wlU come prop
arty. Te«ih wide apart la said to be
a sign of future prosperity and nap
n had reining uD day,
finally little Nettle asked: “Mamma,
when God gets all the Juice sqnresed
out of a cloud what does he do with
ur
LUCKY SIXPENCE SAVED HIM
Good to Story Preserve of Beau How Fate B rummell Intervened to
History** Pages.
The old superstition about the lucky
charm of a crooked sixpence arose
early In the Eighteenth century, and
its author was none other than Beau
Brummel, the most famous of the
world’s dandles, Brummdl, although
the bosom friend of the prince of
Wales, came from common enough
stock, his grandfather having been a
valet. But he saved, as did Brum
melljs father, and Brummell had some
$150,000 to serve him. He became a
great gambler and a good loser, often
staking thousands of pounds. One
night he played at Walter’s club, and
when he rose from the table he was
a pauper. Not only that, but heavily
In debt
He wandered out Into the London
streets, with head downcast; and as
he strolled along he picked up a.
crooked sixpence. In a whimsical mo¬
ment he returned to the club and
matched It with a chance friend. He
won, matched again and again, and
won each time. The game changed
to shilling matches, and then to gold
pieces, and BrummeH at the end of
a few minutes found himself with two
or three pounds, He went to the
gaming table, sat down, and when
dajvn came and the game closed he
had won over 12,000 pounds, or about
$60,000. The crooked sixpence he car¬
ried with him for years, and shortly
after he lost it hts bad luck arose
again, and he once more became a
pauper.
RANKED AS MARVEL OF ART
- .
»
Michelangelo’s Superb Decorations In
the Siatine Chapel Sufficed to
Give Him Eternal Fame.
Michelangelo’s decoration of the
vault of the Sistlne chapel was hailed
as the greatest piece of work ever
done by a painter’s hand. It was a
task of colossal proportions, the cell¬
ing alone measuring 132 feet by 44
feet The painter had to do much
work lying flat on his back on a. scaf¬
fold. For some time afterward he
was unable to read except when In
that position.
Michelangelo arranged the vast
space as though It had been roofless,
framing It with architecture In per¬
spective delusion and filling the open
spaces with paintings. Just above the
windows are the figures of the ances¬
try of Christ in attitudes of eager
waiting; above them 12 gigantic fig¬
ures of prophets and sibyls; ^ln the
corners, four representations from the
history of Israel. In the center of the
vault the stories of the “Creation of
the World,”, the “Fall of Man,” and
the “Deluge” are told In nine pictures.
Among the central pictures Is the
“Creation of Adam.” Adam Is depicted
Just on the point of .rising, just as
God’s touch sends the’ first thrill of
life through his veins. Of the proph¬
ets, Jeremiah Is the image of deep
thought, and Zachariah a type of tnen
tal absorption.
Fidelity Marked Telegrapher.
One striking example of the early
spirit of endurance under great stress
of which the telegrapher of the old
school was capable was given by John
Carnahan, then a young man In his
thirties, at the time of the Custer
massacre. He was operator and news¬
paper correspondent at Bismarck,
which was the nearest telegraph of¬
fice to the scene of Custer’s last fight,
500 miles west Attending his regular
duties, and gathering here and there
from the incoming scouts and plains
stragglers the thrilling story of Custer
to send to the anxiously waiting world,
he worked 40 hours without rest, and
for several days and nights he only
caught a few winks of sleep, yet all
the newspaper rending world were
eagerly grasping for the thousands of
words of story he was gathering. They
never kneV how one man was work¬
ing to satisfy them.
Has Nasal Musicians.
Hawaiian ukeieles have become one
of the most popular musical instru¬
ments la the United States, but It' Is
doubtful if Americans would take SO
kindly to another Instrument, once
used throughout the Hawaiian group.
The “nose flute” is referred to. At the
present time there are few of these to
be found in Hawaii, save In the mu¬
seums and collections which belong
to old residents, but occasionally «n
old native can be located who still
blows dnicet nasal strains. The
“nose flute la n small whistlelike af¬
fair, which tho old-time natives used
In connection with the gourds which
furnished music for the hulas of his
time. It was blown through with
one nostril, the other being held with
a finger, which closed or opened it for
the passage of air to vary the volume
of the notes.
Milky Way Legend*.
Fables regarding tills group of stars
appear In tlio literature of almost
etery nation. The Chinese and Jap¬
anese regard it as a stream, with all
very fishes sporting in the waves. The
American .Indians and thq African
Bushmen associate It with lights to
guide the path of wandering spirits
to the happy hunting-grounds. A
Greek legend has It that when Phae¬
ton was driving the chariot of the sun,
the horses took fright at the spectacle
of the monsters of the zodiac. They
bolted from their road, set the heav¬
ens on fire and came near burning up
the earth. The scorched track of
their runaway was marked by the
milky way.
How to Test a Current.
To find ont If an electric circuit !•
fed by continuous or alternating cun
rent approach a magnet to .the file,
nents of an Incandescent lamp. These
srlll be attracted if the current be con¬
tinuous; they will vibrate if It be al¬
ternating.
Journal far
One of the oldest periodicals hi the
world is a monthly
tlrely to tha .1 of
•offerer*
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS AND SUN
BID MBITS GROW
Successive Stages In Husband’s
Carelessness.
Especially Is He Apt to Be Thought
, lets of His Wife's Comfort as
tho Years Advance.
Man Is a careless creature by na¬
ture and displays it In {he stages of
his life when he should be’most care¬
ful. Perhaps bis carelessness Is only
visible in its most aggravating form
to bis women folk.
The imputation that it is a' con¬
stant vice would be resented, because
a mian, while be may grow more
careful as he grows older in matters
affecting bis work, bis health, possibly
his appearance, falls to observe, self
centered creature as he Is, that a
careless attitude has arisen and be¬
come a habit in his married life.
Before marriage a man’s every ef¬
fort Is to please the woman; after¬
ward, to please himself, writes Lady
de Freee, in the Paris Mall. v There
comes a time—some people call It the
danger year—when cigars, clubs and
company are first dbnslderation with
a man. He makes appointments and
then tells bis wife, where once be con¬
sulted hIs wi'te, and then made ap¬
pointments.
Carelessness, that Is all. But bis
wife, whose thoughts are at times viv¬
idly retrospective, is wounded on each
and every occasion.
The blatant carelessness of the
breakfast newspaper once started de¬
velops from first hasty glimpses at
the news to grim, masticating silences.
A husband becomes careless In his
hours, careless In hie caresses, care¬
less In all his attentions to his wife.
Boms men become careless about
their clothes, particularly In the
house. Anything will do for the
house. That is an added slight to
his wife and a flattery to himself. He
Implies that she Is not worth the price
of a new tie, or the donning of a
collar, and that his own personality Is
potent against the effect of the baggi¬
est of trousers.
Men never quite lose the little
traits that marked them lp their court¬
ship days. They will still show a hun¬
dred and one little politenesses and
considerations—but to other women
than their wives. The effort to con¬
tinue for years the same attentions to
the one woman is too much for tho
average man. Where once he hastened
to recover a fallen ball of wool he now
allows hi# wife to carry the coal up¬
stairs. Yet his manners outside his
home may still be up to his old stand¬
ard.
New High-Speed Generator.
The so-called Blomquist steam gen¬
erator, lately put In operation In a
Gothenburg mill, is described as a rad¬
ically new type of high-speed steam
generator. If Is a boiler consisting of
li pressed steel cylinders 12 Inches
In diameter and 8 feet In heated length,
and these are rotated on ball bear¬
ings at the rate of 375 revolutions per
minute. Feed water Is Injected at one
end. the steam hejng taken out at the
other. Centrifugal action spreads the
water over the entire inner surface of
the tubes, and the temperature of the
( Steel Is said to be thus kept below 300
degrees Centigrade. The capacity is
13,00© pounds of steam per hour at
50 a nuospheres or 740 pounds per
square Inch. It Is suggested that this
geuerator may be added to Increase
ilie pressure in plants already estab¬
lished, and to provide steam for high
pressure turbines.
Telephone Fluctuation.
A chnrt representing the telephone
business of the average day shows
that from midnight to 6 a. m. business
Is amall and getting smaller; then as
the retail stores and other “early” busi¬
nesses begin to shake off their slum¬
bers It starts to rpount. As offices
open and clear for the day’s action the
rate of Increase gets faster and faster,
until la the one hour between nine and
10 the calls are three times as numer¬
ous as during the GO minutes Immedi¬
ately preceding. As the day’s business
gets into full swing, with everybody
at work, calls continue to Increase,
though at a much less alarming pace;
and the peak-load for the day Is car¬
ried by the hour between 10 and 11,
with 428,000 calls In New York City.
Generals of United States Army.
Following are the six American gen¬
erals: Ulysses S. Grant, Philip H.
Sheridan. William Tecuraaeh Sherman,
Taaker H. Bliss (emergency), Peyton
O. March (emergency) and John J.
Pershing. Pershing was made a full
general September 3, 1919. He was In
command of tliff American expedition¬
ary forces.
There are two lieutenant generals
In the army—Hunter Liggett and Rob¬
ert L. Bullard—and five major gener¬
als—Leonard Wood, John F. Morrison,
Charles Q. Morton. William L. Slbert
and Henry Ok G. Sharpe.
HI* First Shoes at 74.
J. T. Cartman of Sodus. N. Y., al¬
though aeventy-four. has Just bought
hla first pair of shoes. He has worn
boots all his life and still wants to
but. search a> he may, he can find
none for sale In any of tha neighbor¬
ing cities.
She I■ Displeased.
“No,” said the movie actress, “you
do not really admire tne."
"Haven’t I lauded your perfections
In many letters?"
“Yea, but my press agent turns out
better atuff on a mere salary."
Earthquakes.
The origin of earrliqaakda I has been
traced to two principal cauaea, , the first
af which Ta tectonic, and the second
volcanic. The former refers to move
nents In the earth’s crush known as
faults, possibly caused by the shrink*
ng of the Interior of the earth by r am
ton of cooling.
Many unkind thing* are sold of tho
‘ ‘ of Its
i
■es Is that you can’t le
INTEREST IN THE
SPtSIUATION
A
WOULD ONLY REQUIRE SOME
INDICATION OF THE REVIVAL
IN THE DEMAND IN LIVER¬
POOL AND SOUTH TO CAUSE
ADVANCE IN PRICE
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 2.—The un¬
dertone of market was steadier to¬
day as result of better cables than
due, slightly larger sales of spots in
Liverpool, 5,000 bales and because of
more inquiry for the actual locality.
A rise of 1%D in London silver
probably had a favorable effect on the
English market causing shorts to
cover.
Press advices indicate that Germany
will refuse to accept the reparation
plan of the allies and will likely ask
for further conferences.
Already ^he allies have agreed not
to mgke any concessions of import¬
ance, and if the terms are violated, to
enforce the dictum, by force of arms
if necessary.
The next political move of import¬
ance will develop at the conference
called for the near future with the
view of establishing peace between
the allies and Turkey, invitation to
which Turkey has accepted and if fav¬
orable results are obtained, the out¬
look for the British trade will be made
brighter.
Of late there has been improvement
in exports. Compared with last sea
bon shipments from the U. S. to Eur¬
ope today were 21,000 as against 16,
000, since Friday 146,000 as against
97,000 but the total-since August .first
is only 2,989,000 compared with 3,
,841,000.
More interest is centered in the
spot situation in the south and Liver¬
pool than in any other feature as it
would only require some indication of
a revival in the demand to advance
prices.
The supply in the interior.is large,
of this there is no question, but the
value of the staple is comparatively
very low, far below the present cost
of production.
Therefore, the surplus has about
lpst itsinfluence as a market factor
owing to prospects for a drastic re
duction in the. acreage this year and
if realized, a smaller crop will be pro¬
duced this year, especially if climatic
conditions be unfavorable or the wee¬
vils destructive, which in time would
probably create a shortage of the
commodity, particularly should there
be world wide improvement in trade
eventually. V
Daily the number of textile mills re¬
suming operations in Apierica is in¬
creasing, and as their stocks of raw
cotton are low they must of necessity
replenish their stock.—H. & B. Beer’s
Cotton Letter.
COTTON MARKETS
GRIFFIN COTTON
MARKET, FEBRUARY 2, 1921.
Griffin cotton market-opened at 14%
cents and closed at 14% cents Wed¬
nesday.
RANGE OF NEW YORK COTTQN
MARKET, FEBRUARY 2, 1921.
Prev.
|OpaalHigh|LowlCIoselCk)—
Mar.----|13.75J13.98|13.63|13.84|13.85 |14.10|14.32|13^7|14.17|14.11
May
July----|14.45|14.61|14.30|14.50|14.42
Oct.----|14.65|l'4.90|14.58|14.82jl4.67
Dec.....|14.85jl5.05|14.77|14.95]14.79
Tone of market: quiet; middling
cotton, 14.15. ,,
RANGH OF NWW ORLEANS
MARKET, FEBRUARY 2, 1921.
Prev.
_|Open|High|Low!Cloae|Clese
Mart----113.40 I13.65ll3.92jl3.5ljl3.78ll3.65 [ 13.68| 13.25| 13.55( 13.42
May---
July .... |13.88|14.17|13.77|14.04[13.89 j^4.29|
Oct. .... 114 .20] 14J36114.11 14.18
Tone of market quiet: - middling
cotton, 13.50.
FOREIGN MONEY
Marks______ 1.61%
Sterling____ 3.84
Francs _____ 7.10
N. Y. Money 9%
LIBERTY BONDH
3% .....91.90
1st 4%........... -----86.60
2nd 4% ........... .....85.60
3rd 4% ........... —— 89.12
4th 4%........... r-j ----- 86.10
Victory 3% ________ —— 97.12
Victory 4%_______ —— 97.24
COTTON OIL.
|Open| noonfclose
March |8.30 |8.29 (8.18
April (8.30 [8.30 (8.57
May (8.74 (8.65 |8.62
July |9.05 (8.98 (8.80
Au*. (9.10 (9.08 (8.95
Sales 8300.
Had Plenty of Tlmo.
boya,” continued the steeple
J«ek. who was telling true and thrill
'eg stories, “yea, I wsa working ■
clock tower one afternoon about two!re
minutes to 8, when I slipped, olid down
the roof and caught on the long hand
at the clock. There I daugled while
the town folks collected below. 8e
I yells to 'i ‘Say you folks, go
It'll he
I »« fy
Spinas ef Porcupine.
Hie opines of a porcupine, la the
wool position, lie nearly Oat, with
their points directed backward, bat
the animal la excited they She
of betas raised. The quills
loosely taserted la the skin and
on beta* violently shaken, be¬
detached, a circumstance which
gave Hss to the purely fains
statement that the animal pew
the power of actually ejecting
quills like arrows or darts at aa
111 For Six Months
hi ^ t
* V
fcL *
to write a the ,3
me to specialists at Dr.
f’leree’a Invalids* Hotel in Buffalo,
N\ Y., as the doctors here couldn’t
in me any good, ao I wrote and they
old me to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
■rescuptlon, Goldei Medical Discov
ry, and Pleasant Pellets according
o directions, and in a short time I
as well.”—MRS. KATE SMITH,
touts 3, Box. 92. All druggists.
I ♦
AD ♦
• ♦ 4L* ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
YAKT1D
Wasted to Bay—1.090 bask
els earn, gar or shotted; 1,000
buskab Wkippaorii H. V.
Kell Co., phone 131. l-22dl0wl
STOLEN
STRAYED—One Jersey milch cow,
with crimpled horns. E. B. Oxford,
phone 829. 2-2dtf
STOLEN—Taken from my safe two
cloth-back books and one black lea¬
ther note book containing some val¬
uable papers. Will pay twenty-five
dollars for return of same. H. P.
Eady. 31-3t
FOR HINT .
FOR RENT—House and % acre lot
opposite the depot, No. 211 West
Broad street. Possession given im
mediately. A. S. Blake & Sons. It.
FOR RENT—One furnished room,
with connecting bath. Phone 725. It.
FOR RENT — Two unfurnished
rooms, corner Ninth and Chapel. Ap¬
ply 233 North Ninth. 2-l-d3L
FOR RENT—Seven room house,
modern convinces. Suitable for two
families. Apply to Dr. A. H. Frye.
1-31-dtf.
FOR RENT—One building 35x100,
suitable for small manufacturing
plant or garage. Rent reasonable. Ap¬
ply to Dr. A. H. Frye. 1-31-dtf.
FOR RENT—To permanent pa^ty,
two unfurnished rooms, one block
from postoffice. 221 W. Taylor street,
phone 396. l-31-d6t.
FOR HINT—Gm< farm with
modern improvements, Four miles
from Griffin. Apply to News office.
d-w tf,
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Budde d paper-shell
pecan trees. T. J. Hunt, Milner, Ga.
FOR SALE—Hot Blast
good condition, phone 903 between
a. m.'and 5 p. m.
FOR SALE—Milch cows at A. 8.
Blake & Son’s Stable. l-27dflt.
FOR SALE—7 passenger car in
first-rfaaa shape or will trade
smaller ear. D. T. Parry, Griffin
Bakary. 1-24-dtf.
mSCILLANBOUS
Our Single Comb Rfcede Island Red
winners are at year service, eggs
$2.50, te-00, $$.W) and $10.00 per 15.
Utility ceckerels and pullets $5.00 and
$10.00 each. Pkoae 88. GRIFFIN RED
FARM, $45 8. Hill St. 1-3-dlm.
Southern
Tire Works
Auto Accessories
Tires and Tubes
1
WE DO IT RIGHT
T, M. MANLEY, JR.,
Manager
NEW MASONIC BLDG.
GRIFFIN, GA* Mi'f
.....
-——
U ,1 / Ad
for about six
mouths, suffer¬
ing from fem¬
inine trouble. I
doctored with
two d 1 f forest
doctors, but
nothing seemed
to do me any
good, I was get-
■
«
SILK INDUSTRIAL
EXHIBITION IN U. 8. SOON
of TOKIO, the Jan. 31.—Correspondence
Associated Press.—The organ¬
izers of the silk industrial exhibition
to be held in America early next year
are searching the silk mills of Japan
for pretty girt operatives. The con¬
ditions demanded of the “silk ladies”
were prime womanhood, robust health,
a stature exceeding five feet, beauty
and last, though not least, intelli¬
gence and skill in giving a display of
the different kinds of work
Ft proved a difficult task to find
girls that cams up to the description,
but, after strenuous efforts three
wore favorably reported upon and
they were being trained for the ex
hibttfagfc
■
STRAIGHT ' i 10 *
IO r V STMKHT Um
.... m
.
Better and morepleasing than
any mild Havana cigar. ■
Ask your dealer for yoBr favorite sg*
If your dealer cant supply uou — tvrili
OTHKH 12 P'1. Largest LEWIS Independent CIGAR Cjgar MFC. Factory CQNnmJU
SIZES in the World
IM
• • ’ - • ' ,L - .
.
Sowing Dollars ■
For a Thrift Crop • ••• -
Sowing tha seed is only onft step in the production of
a crop.
If the harvest is to be abundant, favorable conditions ■
must be maintained. * - "
To the business man this means favorable credit condi¬
tions. 1
The Federal Reserve System if the great stabilizer of
commercial credit conditions today. It insures an ample
supply of such credit at all times.
WE PAY FOUR PER CENT ON SAVINGS. im
^
Second National Bank ■ -
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
mmmm - -
iti
If can't i m
you come -
v
Bank Here by Mail ■
If you haven’t time to call at our bank to tnuosact your ^
buginess whenever you may desire, there is no need
worry.
Simply send us a money order, draft or check for the
amount you may wish to deposit, and we will see that the
sum is properly credited, and a pass-book returned to you.
Banking by mail is easy and safe,* and it will be a
pleasure to serve you to our utmost.
'4M&
MERCHANTS & PLANTERS BANK. WiA
GRIFFIN, GA. ■
“THE BANK WHERE YOU FEEL AT HOME
R ialt
Kama at t ka Beat Platens u4 Muaie
TODAY’S PICTURE t
U
v-j
i. K
•
I#
ff H Of THE HIES )) ■
■
SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION
THE MAN WITH A PUNCH If
A TWO-REEL WESTERN
ALSO
if LOOSE U0NS ff
A COMEDY THAT IS PULL OF PEPl
• \
THURSDAY
JESSE L. LASKY PRESENTS ■
W ''(*!
■
In
‘BURGLAR PR
A human thrift stamp] W
taught it to play dead. But on
dancing baby lamb, and she bit
some one had put something in
- “mm w x- a 1
■ — " " **
mw
want ad I «
..
ten
ing to her recovery will be i
by a good drink of whiske
Deem, supervisor.
Next day Supervisor Dw... ___
looking over a dozen offers brought in
by farmers all claiming to have found
the lost animal. A11 were willing fe
swap a heifer for a drink. Deem Anal,
ly located his heifer in the midst. It
had been found by H. C. Sweat who
lives a abort distance east of Galva.
Sweat's wife objected to his collect.
fag the reward.