Newspaper Page Text
THE
HEN-MAN
B
By R. H. WILKINSON
©, Bell Syndicate.—~WNU Service.
HERE exists in America a cer
tain type of person who, born
I and raised in a city apartment,
possesses what is known in the
vernacular as a yen to own a small
place in the country, firmly believing
that he can buy a few chickens, raise
a few vegetables and live there, com
muting to and from his metropolitan
Job, for about one-third the cost of ex
istence in his city apartment.
This is a splendid idea, especially
that part about living one-third as
cheaply as im the city.
It has its other advantages, too.
There is, for example, the matter of
fresh air, fresh dairy products, plenty
»of space to move around in, freedom
from the hustle and bustle of city life.
It's a pity that the plan hasn't, can't
and never will be developed profitably.
I mean the moving-to-the-country
bug.
Steve Bolton was attacked by the
bug.
Steve had become fed up on city life.
He was a bachelor, young and hand
some, and was forever chasing about
from party to tea to dinner, to theater,
or any other of the dozen places where
handsome and eligible young bachelors
are welcomed.
Steve was fed up.
He wanted a breath of fresh air;
wanted to get up with the sun, drink
in the crisp morning air, tend to the
chickens and catch the 7:50 train to
town and his broker's office.
He wanted to spend his evenings
seated comfortably before a cozy fire,
get in some good reading, go to bed
at nine o'clock and sleep the sleep of
the just.
Also, he wanted to economize,
The cost of living in town wasn’t
giving Steve much of an opportunity
to save for rainy days.
. ® .
This plan of Steve's was swell. Too
bad it couldn’t work.
Steve talked the idea over with Jim
McDevitt.
Jim had tried the same thing once.
but for some unknown reason was
back in his city apartment.
Jim approved of Steve's idea without
a moment’s hesitation.
“Great scheme. You'll like it, Steve,
out there. Fine way to live. Fact is,
I'll have the missus buy her eggs fromn
you. You can bring them in every
morning. Help you get started.”
Steve's dreams soared.
He pictured himself laying aside a
tidy sum from the profits on his eggs.
Good scout, Jim.
Steve also called on Rus Whitcomb.
Rus and his wife had tried the living
in-the-country idea, too.
And Rus, like Jim, approved and ap
plauded.
Sure, he’d buy all the eggs Steve
could raise.
Fresh eggs from the country! Boy,
nothing could be better.
Later that same;mght Jim MeDevitt
called Rus Whitcomb on the telephone
and the two of them held a gleeful
conversation,
So old Steve had got the bug, eh?
Well, let him find out for himself.
Won't do him any harm to get stung.
He'd never rest till he got the ecrav
ing out of his system anyhow.
Besides, it was comforting to know
there were other fish grabbing at thal
same live-cheaply-in-the-country bait,
L - *
On the following Sunday, Steve
chartered a drive-your-own ear and
motored out in the country,
Along toward mid-afternoon he
chanced upon a little place in the town
of Medvale that seemed to suit his
exact purpose,
There was a white house with green
blinds and a picket fence around the
front lawn, In which a half dozen
shade trees reared themselves.
Behind the house there was a barn,
several outbuildings and a rather large
henery.
The place was not more than a 15
minute walk from the railroad station,
vet its remoteness from the traveled
highway was far enough to make it
ideal. :
Steve hunted up the owner and was
astonished and delighted to discover
the place could be rented for less than
one-half of what he was paying at
his present apartment.
. He sewed the thing up at once by
making a substantial deposit and sign
ing a six months’ lease,
A month later Steve was established
in his new abode and tremendously
happy.
Two dozen Rhode Island Red chick
ens clucked contentedly in the henery.
Wond was stacked ceiling high in
the barn. r
Shrubs had begun to flower and the
shade trees were bursting forth their
buds.
Ah, yes, Steve was far happier than
he ever dreamed he could be.
He was going to bed early. getting
up early, reading a lot and learning a
good deal about the hen business.
. . .
After the first week Steve carried
with him each morning a half dozen
nice fresh eggs and proudly handed
them to Jim and Rus when he reached
the office. ; :
Jim and Rus received them solemnly
and praised him. highly for his success
and winked broadly behind bis back.
Along ‘about the first of May, Steve's
hens, or most of them, stopped laying.
After failing to solve the mystery
himself, he consulted a neighbor and
was told that the biddies were at this
time of year usually interested in rais
ing a family.
Steve thought this was great. He
went home, gathered together all his
spare eggs and put five of his hens
to set. i
The others he locked up in a barren
_anteroom to “break up” their family
raising notions.
At the end of two weeks eight of the
three dozen eggs Steve had set,
hatched.
The young man was jubilant.
He proudly summoned his neighbor,
to display the result of his breeding
efforts, and was told that five of the
eight chicks were roosters, which
wasn't so good.
* * - x
It was about this time that monthly
bills began to arrive at the hen farm,
and after an evening spent in intensive
figuring Steve discovered that the cost
of electric lights, cooking gas, tele
rhone and other incidentals of liveli
hood was quite as much, if not more,
than the cost of the same conveniences
in town.
It was two days after this that Steve
learned, much to his disappointment,
that the “fresh” cream, milk and but
ter which he had been having left at
his door each morning were shipped
out of Boston on the night previous
and distributed in the country by a
chain dairy products company.
Augmenting these startling revela
tions, Steve came to the conclusion
that getting up with the sun every
morning wasn't such a swell ldea, es
pecially if it happened to be a rainy
day or if the air wasn’t bracing be
cause of the hnmidity. 5
He found also that the long, quiet
evenings were more or less palling
once you got used to them, and that
a month of reading had brought him
up to date on current literature.
In fact, Steve began to know a long
ing for a fling at city life, for an eve
ning at a night c¢lub or trip to the
theater or a gay dinner party.
. . -
Startlingly, he discovered that, after
all, farming was a business, and unless
you devoted your entire time to it, it
was pretty difficult to make it pay.
Which, incidentally, when you look
at the thing squarely, is quite true of
almost any business. e
To add to all this, Steve one day
awoke to the fact that Jim and Rus,
who had had their fling of commuting
from the country, were giving him
what Is known as the merry ha, ha.
They had, in a manner of speaking,
put up a job on him.
They wanted to see him get stung.
And when he finally admitted that
this country Idea was a lot of bilge
they would be all set to enjoy the sit
nation with crude and raucous guf
faws. # 3
This knowledge was disturbing.
Steve's ears burned at thoughts of it
And in the end he vowed to foil the
instigators of the joke, and turn, if
possible, the tables,
. oy
Thus minded, Steve on the day fol
lowing brought as usual his half dozen
fresh eggs to the conniving rascals
who posed as friends and advisers,
suggesting on delivery that, in view
of the fact that eggs were scarce these
days and because these from Medvale
were strictly fresh, the recipients of
the daily half dozen pay a little more
than the amount asked at the corner
delicatessen for less fresh hen fruit.
Jim and Russ agreed readily enough,
Os course, fresh eggs were worth
more money.
What was more, they were eager
and anxious to give Steve a helping
hand.
A week later Steve moved back to
his ecity apartment and with a great
feeling of relief settled once more into
the comfortable routine to which he
was accustomed.
But each morning for six months
thereafter he paused at the corner
chain store en route to the office, pur
chased two one-half dozen boxes of
eggs at 20 cents the half dozen, and
later sold them to Jim and Rus for
30 cents.
Which explains why, in the early
fall, when Jim and Rus, puzzled over
Steve's continued success as a hen
man, motored one day to the little
white house in Medvale (the same
house, incidentally, which first one and
then the other had occupied during
their own venture In the egg-raising
business) they discovered that Steve
had quitted the place six months pre
vious, and were prone not to guffaw
when next they encountered the would
be hen-man, but merely to chuckle in
good fellowship fashion and vow with
him to warn all others against the
live-in-the-country bug when ({t at
tacked friends and neighbors of the
city.
Early Transatlantic Flights
The United States navy seaplane
NC-4 was the first heavier-than-air
craft to cross the Atlantic, This was
in May, 1919. It left Rockaway, N. Y.,
with two companion seaplanes on May
8 and arrived at Lisbon, Portugal, on
May 27. The trip was made with stops
in Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and
the Azores. The first airplane to cross
the ocean in a single flight was a Brit
ish Vickers-Vimy biplane, flown by
Capt. John Alcock, pilot, and Lieut.
Arthur W. Brown, navigator. It left
St. John’s. N. F., June 14, 1919, and
landed early the following day at
Clifton, Galway, Ireland. The British
dirigible R-34 was the first of its class
to cross the Atlantic. It ieft Scotland
on July 2, 1919, reached Mineola, N.
Y., via Newfoundland, on July 6, and
returned by the same route from July
9 to 12. :
PEMBROKE JOURNAL
Minimum to Be More Than
Sixty Millions.
Chicago.—The. money which will be
added to Chicago pay rolls this year
as a result of the second showing
of A Century of Progress exposition
will be more than twice as much as
was paid in the Chicago area by the
Civil Works administration, Compara
tive figures were made public from
the Keep Chicago Ahead Civie com
mittee. The civil works program lasted
about four and a half months; the
fair will run for five months,
A direct minimum pay roll of $60,-
531,000 can be anticipated from jobs
created directly by the fair, accord
ing to the committee, which based its
estimate on figures furnished by P. R.
Kerschbaum, acting chief of research
and statistics of the state department
of labor.
The total number of employees as a
result of the fair, 25,000 in the fair
proper and 100,000 in hotels, amuse
ment establishments, laundries, pub
lic utilities, filling stations, and other
places, will exceed the highest em
ployment figure of the CWA, that for
the week ended January 18, That
figure, 110,703, was far in excess of
the average CWA weekly employment
figzure of 81,000 persons.
The average weekly pay roll of all
wage earners in Chicago, according to
the committee report, was $22.33 in
February, the last month available
for statistical study. The pay rolls
studied did not include those of ex
ecutives and managers, but included
general employees of both manufac
turing and nonmanufacturing institu
tions. Using this pay roll average. and
the employment figures from last
year's fair, the Keep Chicago Ahead
Civie committee arrived at its esti
mate of a $60,000,000 pay roll for
the fair this year.
“When compared with the total
CWA pay roll of not quite $30,000,000,”
the report said, “this ficure is par
ticularly enlightening. Thé CWA stim
ulated business in Chicago to a high
degree, IHow much more so should
Chicagoans count on the fair to help
out when a minimum pay roll figure
shows it will do twice as much good
in that respect alone.”
The committee is raising a budget
of a half million dollars to publicize
Chicago and promoie fair attendance.
I WASHINGT(;N BRIEFS I
The veterans’ administration laid
down a rule that blind veterans of the
World war are entitled to nearly twice
the relief given a soldier who lost a
leg in action,
Army engineers recommended that
congress appropriate £12,000,000 as the
federal government’s contribution
toward the $170,000,000 California cen
tral valley project.
Representative Dirksen (Rep., TIL)
introduced a resclution proposing a
congressional investigation into the
Nlinois administration of the Home
Owners' Loan corporation.
The senate agriculture committee
voted to report a bill calling for the
investigation by a senate committee
of the nation’s milk industry. The
bill provides for $50,000 for the in
vestigation.
Relief Administrator Harry I, Hop
kins estimated that the federal relief
bill would average between $60,000,000
and $65,000,000 a month and that April
expenditures may exceed the maxi
mum figure by “between $10,000,000
and $15,000,000.”
Broker Kills Family
of Five and Himself
Minneapolis, Minn.—Money worries
were blamed for a sixfold tragedy in
which a crazed insurance broker, A. J.
Freudenfeld, killed his wife, his three
children, ranging in age from eight to
fourteen, and mother-in-law, Mrs. Cora
de Haven, and then took his own life,
The six were found dead in bed, with
bullet holes in their heads. The police
found a pistol beside Freudenfeld.
They reported he had shot his rela
tives as they lay asleep, He left a
note asking that they be cremated and
that a family friend, Fred Weil, ad
minister the life insurance obligations.
Weil said Freudenfeld recently had
suffered money losses,
Fire Chief and Aid
Perish in Flames
Perth Amboy, N. J.—Fire Chief Ro
land Jensen and Fireman Sylvester
Palo perished in a fire which swept
through the G. & W, Grand 5 and 10
cent store in East Fifth street.
Jensen and Palo were first to reach
the scene of the fire and immediately
went into the blazing building. They
were seen no more.
Trenton Publisher Dies
Baltimore, Md.—James Kerney, six
ty-one, Trenton (N. J.) publisher and
friend of the late Woodrow Wilson,
died of heart disease at the Johns
Hopkins hospital after a week there,
under treatment,
Nephew of “T. R.” Dies
Herkimer, N, Y.—Theodore Douglas
Robinson, nephew of Theodore Roose
wvelt, and former assistant secretar)
of the pavy died at his home of pneu
monia,
GFORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
Saving deposits in three Augusta
banks show an increase of $639,730.38
for the past 13 months.
The Cedartown postoffice shows an
increase of 15.7 per cent business over
the same quarter last year,
Macon people have saved a cool mil
l Lion since this time last year, a survey
of savings banks has disclosed.
Professor Claude Chance of the Uni
versity of Georgia has been elected ag
president of the Athens Rotary Club.
Augusta will be headquarters for the
national re-employment offices in that
area, according to recent announce
ment.
Students at Agnes Scott College, De~
catur, have been told by their presi
dent that if they insist on smoking to
withdraw from school,
Valdosta has been chosen as the
1935 convention city of the Woman's
Missionary Society of the South Geor
gia Methodist conference,
Seventeen undergraduate and three
graduate students of the University
of Georgia have been elected to mem
bership in Phi Beta Kappa.
Statements of condition, mad. dur
ing the past week by banks in eight
east Georgia counties, reveal an in
crease of 33 per cent in deposits.
Five University of Georgia land
scape architecture students are now on
a five-day study and observation tour
through South Georgia and northern
Florida.
Construction of a creosoting plant
in Thomasville was begun this week
by a local lumber plant as an adjunct
to its facilities for serving the Build
ing trade.
Alton Henley Glasure, of Union
Point, has accepted appointment as
fi-e¢ lieutenant in the chaplains’ re
gerve, U. S. A, the war department
has announced.
Actual work on the Stone Mountain
memorial project has begun as a result
of a $50,000 CWA grant, it has been
announced by Robert L. MacDougall,
FERA state engineer.
The division of rural and vocational
education of the University of Geor
gia has inaugurated the apprentice~
ship method of training teachers of
vocational agriculture.
The University of Georgia has inau
gurkted a . continuous four quarter
termi which will permit students to
graduate within three years, saving
the cost of one year at school.
Three hundred and sixteen members
of the R, O, T. C. and 185 reserve of
ficers have been tentatively assigned te
the annual summer encampment at the
infantry school at Fort Benning,
Distriet directors of the Georgia
Federation of Music Clubs reported
strong interest throughout the state
in affairs of the federation at a recent
session of the annual convention at
Savannah,
The Georgia public service commis
gion has issued an order reducing rail
road freight rates on intrastate ship
ments of sand, gravel and allied com
modities by from 25 to 50 per cent, ef=-
fective May 15.
A material reduction in maximum
freight rates to be charged by rafl
roads for movement of cottonseed in
trastate was ordered recently by the
Georgia public service commission, ef
fective May 10.
Tobacco farmers in the south’s flue
cured helt, which includes Georgia and
Florida, are receiving government
money for their part in co-operating
in the farm administration’s crop re
duction program.
Another blow was struck at the op
erators of slot machines when the
Colquitt eounty grand jury returned
indictments against 10 men who are
allezed to have the gambling devices
in their places of business,
Entrance of Athens as a division of
the Atlanta-Savanaah motorcade to
celebrate the paving of the Four-Cap
ital highway featured development of
the plans for the big event, which will
be held the latter part of June.
The sale and transfer of the Colum
bus Brick & Tile Company to the
Muscogee Trading Company, a new
corporation, for a consideration of
$150,000 was shown of record in su
perior court at Columbus recently.
High tribute was paid Governor Ku
gene Talmadge for his part in keeping
the common schools of the state from
closing by Mrs. R. H. Hankinson, of
McDonough, state president, at the re
cent sescion of the Georgia Congress of
Parents and Teachers in Atlanta.
Charles Akerman, Macon attorney, 18
the newly elected moderator of the
Macon presbytery, chogsen as the
presbytery began its session at Ma
con on April 10,
An appeal to the parents and teach
ers of this state to assist in making
education more informal was made
by Willies A. Sutton, superintendent
of Atlanta public schools at a recent
gession of the 21st annual convention
of the Georgia Congress of Parents and
Teachers held at the Baptist Taber:
nacle in Atlanta.
OF WEAKER SEX
'
Authority Asserts Old Idea Is
' " Wrong.
For scores of centurigs, the history
of literature indicates, women have
been considered less strong, less
sturdy than men. “To the feminine
side of creation has been applied the
term, “the weaker sex,” and chivalry
and manners have been predicated
upon the supposition so denominated.
But Dr. 2. V. Allen, a member of the
medical staff of the Mayo clinic,
Rochester, Minn, has contradicted
the entire notion, In a recent survey
of three hundred thousand cases he
says he found facts to support his
contention that mothers, wives and
daughters have survival powers far
in excess of those of fathers, hus
bands and sons. In fine, the “female
of the species” is endowed . with
“more resistance” than the male,
Doctor Allen concedes that his
verdict is unorthodox, Ile agrees:
“Many will take exception to this
statement. They will say that foot
ball players, track men, wrestlers
and those who excel in feats of
strength and endurance are almosr
uniformly males. DBut physical prow
ess is but the outward habiliment
of physical superiority. A quality
much better reflected is ability to
withstand disease.”
Men, Doctor Allen insists, are es
pecially prone to succumb to func
tional ills. Digestive, lung, kidney
and brain ailments shorten their
lives. Granted that woren may be
il more frequently and that they
may be more apt to complain abput
their troubles, there seems to b;T no
possibility of argument about [the
final figures whereby It is manifest
that men die earlier than wmr}len.
Even among infants the death rate
for boys is greater than for girls.
Perhaps the real question is one of
psychological reaction, Women may
guard their health more effectively
than men. Also, they are the benefi
ciaries of a certain protective atti
tude on the part of their masculine
relatives. In this generation, anyway,
the welfare of women is guarded,
whereas men remain very much what
they were a millennium ago—gam
blers with fate, incessantly taking
chances.
It would be easy to be dogmatic,
but there are so many different angles
to such a problem that the philogo
pher will wish to avoid a definite
opinion. The one incontrovertible
fact in the circumstances is that,
weaker or stronger, each sex should
be mindful of the necessity for mak-
Ing life more abundantly -werth liv-
Ing, more worth while.—W ashington
Star,
{ Placing Him
A policeman dashed into a church
while a wedding was in progress.
“Is a man called Dashington-Binks
being married here today?” he asked
the verger,
“ITe’s being married now,” was the
reply.
“Well, I have a warrant for his ar
rest,” said the officer,
“I'riends of the bridegroom on the
risht-hand side of the church, please.”
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are best for liver,
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for
a laxative—three for a cathartic.—Adv.
Behind the Times
The Russian Izvestia reports that a
Christmas message to the late czar
and his family was received in Len
ingrad the other day. It eame from
a Siberian tribe which had not yet
heard of the Russian revolution,
ee o
Two things | wanted
“...and it was all so simple when 1 found out my
trouble. My physician said I had no organic disease,
but T did have what is so commonly and truthfully
called a low percentage of hemo-glo-bin in the blood.
“The reasonableness of one of the 55.8.5. ads caused
me to think that 8.5.8. Tonic was just what I needed
for my let-down feeling, pimply skin and Jow resist
ance. I wanted more strength and a clear skin.
“Tt didn’t take S.S.S. very long to get my blood
back up to normal—and as my strength and energy
returned my skin cleared up.”
If your condition suggests a tonic of this kind, try
S.B.S. It is rot just a so-called tonic but a tonic spe
cially designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and
also having the mineral elements so very, very neces
sary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin
of the blood. ¢
B.S.S. value has been proven by generations of use,
as well as by modern scientific appraisal. Sold by all
drug stores...in two convenient sizes. . .the larger is
more economical, © The 8.5.5. Co.
\_—————.————_—‘———-——_
A BODY BUILPDER
Mrs, Johnnie Roy Hall
of 128 W, Taylor St,
Savannah, Ga., said:
A few years ago Ilost
weight and strength as
my appetite was poor.
In my weakened con
bditlon I had many colds,
I took Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Distov-
ery and this tonic reemed
to put new life in my whole body, my appe
tite improved wonderfully, I gained in
weight and strongth, regained my youthful
color, and colds were a thing of the past."”
Write Dr. Pierce's Clinic, Buffalp, N, Y,
FERRY’S lcceranis
L SEEDS
B " ritinse
- BAD-TASTING WATER
Fugitive electric current has heem
identified as one of the surreptitious
forces that at intervals blight water
supplies, according to a report of re
searchers in northern New Jersey by
the lackensack Water company.
Coursing along the water pipe which
provides a metallic path through
the house wiring. system from some
household electrical device, such as
a vacuum cleaner, it seems to be a
possible cause of certain tastes and
odors which mysteriously appear in
the water delivered to a consumer,
yet absent in water in the street
main, the report declared-—Literary
Digest.
ired..N
Tired.. Nervous
Wite
x;j@ B g Wins Back
R w‘b # ‘
G U HER raw nerves
PR o SRR were soothed.
Gl SHBEERCEN She banished that
R R 1T “dead tired” feele
ST A b §ne Won new youthe
ful color—restful nights, active days—all be
cause she rid her system of bo_wel-clogfmg
wastes that were sapping her vitality. NR Tab
lets (Nature’s Remedy) —the mild, safe, alle
vegetable laxative—worked the transformation.)
Try it for constipation. biliousness, heads
ac{gs,g‘i:zzzspells. .
colds. See how re- N g RO
freslied you fesl N{fTQ:N'LG HT
ists'— (@ ORI S
o AL
i lief for acid indiges~
CTUMS” St io >
et e ettt e vttt
Give Your Hair
Anoint the scalp with Cuticura
Qintment. Then shampoo with
a suds of Cuticmra Soap and
warm water. Rinse thoroughly. This
treatment will keep the scalp in a
healthy condition and the hair soft
and lustrous,
Ointment 25 and 50c. Soap 25c. w
Proprietors: Potter Drug & -“
Chemieal Corporation, Malden, Mass,
eee e e e e e e el
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e ——
WNU—7 16—34
Create Advantages
Shed no tears over your lack of
early advantages, No really great
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WANTED—MEN LEARN BARBER Trade.
Make money while learninz. Tultion 335
Compiete course in § weeks. Queen's Cole
lege, Sparfanburg, 8. C. '
—————————————
10,000 Burhels Speckle Velvet Beans $1.903
Bunch $4; Brabham Peas $2,50; Irom
$2.50. Mixed $2. Burch, Chester, Georgia.
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OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION
Send stamp.
JUDGE LEHMAN - - Humboldt, Kam
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FIVIZ PAIRS, SI.OO, SILK HOSIERY; Tes
?fllrs men’s, §sl, postpaid (money back).
directco, 221 W. Broad, Savannah, Go.
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PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff -Stops Hair Falling
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair|
60c and $1 .Ognt Druggists,
Hiseox Chem. Wks., Patehogue, N. Y.,
FLORESTON SHAMPOO == Ideal for use in
connectionwithParker's Hair Balsam, Makesthe
hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at dru;
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.E