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SAVE
arge quanities of hay has been shipped
into Houston county this year and pros
pects are that more will be shipped
here next year.
ou need a good Mowing Machine and
Rake to help save it.
e sell the McCormick Mower which is
he best known machine on the market.
We have them ready for delivery
to early
B. H. ANDREW & SON
PERRY, GA.
PLAN NAVAL PLANE BASES
Program Adopted Would Make Atlan
tic Coast Bases Await Completion
Of The Western Fields
Convlots fn mutiny <set Fire To Prison
York, Pa.—Nine convictB sent to
the York county jail recently from
the eastern penitentiary at Philadel
phia, mutinied and set fire to the
prison. The fire was extinguished
before serious damage was caused to
iOKLAiiOM CITY IS Ml
Oklahoma City,
imartial law took a definite
Washington.—Analysis of the
port of the Willard Board,
adopted by the -navy department as oners were, overcome by the smoke Iwhen Oklahoma City, leading the way
the official program for development and flames and are in a seriouB con- ifor the remainder of ■'the state passed
ot naval air stations, shows a deter- dition. The prisoners in the tier in 'under the virtually complete -control
ruination to development of the wes- which the fire was started, beat upon |of the military.
ern depots during the next ten years, the bars of their cells with their eat- General orders embodying the es<
It. is believed by students of strategy fife utensils and made a noise all iSentlal regulations under which the
that there is more chance in the fact Q isht long. They tore their bed ticks .state capital will live during the sub*
that, this period coincides with that to pieces and spread the straw along
during which no construction will be *he tier. Into this straw .lighted
in progress on battleship replace-, matches were tossed.
MOTHER! Fletcher’s Castoria is a harmless Substitute for
| Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups,
©repared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages, of
Constipation Wind Colic
•Flatulency To Sweeten Stomach
•Diarrhea 'Regulate Bowels
Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and
* Natural Sleep without Opiates
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it.
lueuts. Under the five-power naval
treaty these will begin in 1931 when
three vessels will be laid down to take
the place of the Florida, Utah and
Wyoming.
The Willard board recommended
the expenditure of only $820,000 in
the 1926 budget for air stations, com
prising $664,OOO for the Canal zone
and $266,000 for Hawaii, but succes
sive annual increments as follows:
1926— Canal zone, $26,000;-Hawaii
$220,000; Alameda, $60,000; Sand
Point, Washington, $150,000.
1927— Canal zone, $210,000; Hawaii,
$261,000; Sand Point, Washington,
$160,000; San Deigo, $160,000.
1928— Canal zone, $294,000; Hawaii,
$86,000; Alameda, $176,000; Sand
Point, $265,000.
1929— Canal zone, $300,000; Hawaii,
$160,000; Alameda, $170,000; Sand'
Point, $146,000.'
1930— Hawaii, $300,000; Alameda,
$109,000; San Diego, $100,000.
1931— Hawaii, $346,000; Alameda,
$365,000; Sand Point, $131,000.
1932— Alameda, $74,000; Sand Point,
$300,000; San Deigo, $165,000.
1933— Canal zone, $169,000; Hawaii,
$150,000; San Deigo, $160,000.
1934— Hawaii, $726,000 (to com
plete.)
Under the approved schedule the
Alameda project would be completed
in 1936 with an appropriation of
$370,000 and the Washington station
‘ in the following year with a similar
appropriation. The Guantanamo fleet
base air station would be started in
1938 with an allowance of $570,000,
to which would be added $696,000 in
1939 and $42,000 in 1940 when the
project wbuld be completed.
The Atlantic coast bases will be
allowed to wait, under the approved
program, untii those on the Pacific
are well under way. The marine
flying field at Quantico, Va., would
be the first to be taken up to any
considerable extent with appropria
tions of $46,000 in 1929 and $310,000
in 1930, completioii of the project bo
ing carried over to 1938. Work on
the fleet b$se station at Hampton
Roads would start in 1932, with com
pletion set for 1938. Projects at
Pensacola, Fla., and Anacostia, D. C.,
are not scheduled for final commis
sioning before 1942. That at Chat
ham, Mass., would be complete in
1943, and the Cape May, N. J., Key
West, Fla., and Charleston, S. C., proj
ects In 1944.
pension of civil authority, were is
sued by Lieutenant Colonel W.,, Sf.
Keys, in command of local troops. ,
Streets and highways of Oklahoma
Sale Of Railroad Ordered By Court jeounty in which Oklahoma City ip lo*
Savannah.—In pursuance of an or- jeated, must be cleared between mid*
der issued by Judge P. W. Meldrim might and 6 o’clock a. m., according
of the superior court the Midland rail- j t0 the orders. Persons whose employ-
road, running from Savannah to imeut makes it necessary for them to
Stephen’s - Crossing in Burke county j be abroad during, the iuterva.1 between .
on the Georgia railroad, will be Bold (these hours must obtain passes. Car
on the first Tuesday in October, ft pyffig of fire arms is forbidden unless
is sold as a going concern and in ’by virtue of permission by the com*
its entirety, including the terminals |mandlng officer,
here, depots and stations, locomo- ; Sale of firearms and ammunition is
tives and rolling stock, and other (Prohibited.
properties. • Public assemblies called for the pur*
—L-... jpose of creating opposition to the en*
The Nominee For Governor Dies iforcement of martial law Is forbid*
Louisville, Ky.—j. Campbell Can- jden as 1b also publication of articles
trill of Georgetown, representative ihavlng a tendency "to Incite to riot
from the Seventh Kentucky district, ior violence or obstruction of the mill*
and Democratic nominee for governor, itary.” 1
died at a hospital here after an ab- Orders governing the conduct of
domlnal operation. Mr. Cantriil was ibuBiness, operation of public utilities
chosen in the primary August 4 as the {and agencies that "contribute to the
standard-bearer of his party at the (welfare of the people" will be issued
next November election ovor Alben W. jfrom time to time aB the situation
Barkley of Paducah, representative ^warrants, according to Lieutenant-Col*
from the First congressional district, 'onel Key. Simultaneous with the
H1b health failed during the pre-pri- jissue of the general orders, it was «n»
rnary campaign and several times he bounced at military headquarters that
was reported on the verge of collapse, (a special district court grand jury,
— (scheduled to meet soon to investigate
Ruhr Resistance Has Fallen To Pieces alleged misuse of state funds by Gov*
Damvillers, France.—Talking at the brnor J. C. Walton wotild not be con-
inauguration of a monument to the jvened.
war dead, Premier Poincare said that | When informed of the intention of
the resistance in the Ruhr which the '.the military to prevent the grand
Germans had counted on to discourage (Jury’s meeting, District Judge George
the French had been overcome little ]W. Clark asserted that the jury would)
by little, and now was beginning to 'be convened and that the military au*
collapse altogether. The speech of the .thorities could then order its adjourn*
premier dealt with recent declarations ment.
by Doctor Stresemann, Hails von Rau- V "The grand jurors will meet,"'
mer, German minister of economics, 'judge Clark declared. “The governor
Money to Loan
Farm Lands in Houston County a A Low Rate of {latere*
If yon wint.money quick write orea'l
Hatcher-Turpin Co.
Mulberry St. Macon, Georgia.
Aged Riverman Is Slain By Bullet
• Florence, Ala.—The body of Andy
Pack, an aged river man who lived
at Conners Landing, 18 miles below
Florence, was found floating in the
Tennessee river by deputies from the
local sheriff’s office. Pack had been
shot through the heart. It is the
theory of the deputies that the man
was shot while seated in his boat
lishing, as signs showed that a heavy
abject bad;been dragged-through the
mud from the boat to deeper water,
Joe Pack, a nephew of the dead man
!s charged with the killing.
Your Business
Make it Speed Up by Usingl
BUSINESS STATIONERY
u your Farm, For your Store, For your
Office, For your Shop
Its Good Advertising
and
[t P^ys to Advertise
LET us HAVE YOUR ORDER
the HOME JOURNAL
JPBRRY.QA.
New Offensives Is The Rivera Plan
London.—A new offensive in Mo
rocco is planned by Primo' Rivera,
president of 'the military directorate
In Spain. The Madrid correspondent
it the Daily Express quotes the head
of the new government as follows
"We are sending General Aizpuru to
Morocco with orders to settle the
whoie problem there. We will re
ipect our treaties with Ralsuli but
will make no treaty with Abl-El Krim
(the Riff chieftain) and will launch
new offensive In the Mellila zone
in accordance with plans outlined."
State-wid«
Okla.
form
and Rudolf HUterding, German min
ister of finance, and also covered the
object of the meeting. •
Good Crops Promise Fine State Fairs
Philadelphia.—This year promises
to be a banner one for fairs through
out the country. More persons are
seeking space to display their mer
chandise than for years, and this is
a good omen, say fair managers. Au
gust is the month in which fairs re
ally get under way. State fairs open
in thi& month, and hold sway till the
middle of November. Furthermore,
a thousand other smaller fairs in the
form of county exhibitions, are. also
held from July till November. All
farmers report good crops.
Ask Habeas Writ To Win Release;
Jackson, Miss.—Petition for the re-;
lease of Sharp Welborn, on a writ 1
of habeas corpus, was filed by Wei
born’s attorney, as a result of the re
fusal of prison authorities to release,
him upon presentation of a pardon,
issued by Lieutenant Governor Gas-,'
teel,* ten days ago. Chancellor V. J.
Strieker ordered that the penitentiary
authorities bring Welborn into Hinds
county court here for the hearing on
the petition.
may deliver his order. Then I shall
see what can be done about it."
Across the street from the court,
[house, a machine gun mounted on the
yoot of a restaurant, is trained on the
iwindows of the grand jury room.
CourtB will function as under civil
irule, according to Major Gerald F.
1,0’Brien, executive officer on Lieu
tenant-Colonel Key’s staff with the
jexceptlon that cases Involving speci
fic violation of the general military-
jorders will be prosecuted before- at
court martial.
CigWt Men Are Sought In Murdor Plot
•Rome.—Eight members of the Pan-
Epirote committee, believed to be
guilty of the Janina murders, have
been arrested and placed in the 'Al
banian jail at Janina, according to the
Jorfu correspondent of the "Eppoa."
Italian officials have charged that the
Pan-Epirote committee, an organiza-
;ion of Greek ex-officers, was respon
Bible for the assassinations of Italian
jffieials on the Greso-Albanian fron
tier, Apparently the Greek govern
ment disclaims all responsibility for
the men.
League In Favor Of "Women Police"
Geneva, Switzerland.—Resolutions
favoring employment of women In po*
lice systems throughout the world and!
recommending other measures, lnclud-j
Investigation, by exports, to stamp out
[the white slave traffic were adopted *■
by the loague of nations assembly at*
ter a remarkable discourse before the
delegates by Dame Edith Lyttletoa,]
British representative. Emphasizing)
her remarks, she declared that womqui
wore not pressing for the employment!
of womon as police because of a deslrel
to do the same thing as men, but be-!
cause they know wom-sm in such po*i
sitiona could exercise a great prevent
tlve influence. t
Six Persons Killed By Dresden Police
Berlin.—Six persons were killed and
ten others wounded when the police
fired on unemployed demonstrators
outside the city hall in Dresden.
Tiger Pays $600 To Wife Of Man
Shenandoah, la.—Mrs. Nina Baldwin
has been given $600 because her hus
band of a few months was sent to
|ail. Baldwin was convicted of driv
ing an automobile while intoxicated,
\nd his bride sued Ferrel Patton, al
leged to have sold him them oonshine.
Ratton settled out of court, pf*
Brands Union Expose Of tyed Plot
New Ybrk.—A recently published
series of charges by the United Mine
Workers of America that the com
munist international at Moscow wits
fomently Industrial revolution in the
United States and Canada as a step
toward overthrowing the governments
were characterized by John C. Brldon,
president- of the (National Coal asso
ciation, as "a bold, ineffective and
belated attempt by the mine workers’
officials to evade responsibility fori
event of which they justly should be
ashamed."
Blazing Broonis Menace The Treasury
Washington.—Fire broke out in
treasury building the other night,
bringing out all available fire-fighting
apparatus. The blaze was discovered
in a pile of brooms on the basement
floor' near the large vaults. J«.*waa
brought under control in about ten min
utes, although, when the fire depart
ment arrived, it had a good start The
damage was estimated at about one:
thousand dollars. The fire depart
ment has been congratulated for its
efficient work in Baving the building,
and preventing spread of the
Five Thousand Die In Japan Typhoon
London.—Five thousand-persois are
reported to have perished in the ter
rible floods which followed upon the
typhoon. at Tottori, northwest of
Kobe, Japan, according to an Osaka
dispatch to the Central News. The,
rivers Fukure, Ohlyo and Takima
burst their banka, destroying many
villages. The terrific downpour of
rain has been general. Both Toklo
and Yokohama have suffered greatly
from the' deluge and railways are
crippled. The imperial princess has de-;
elded to return to Toklo.
Fjles A* Rate of 266 Miles Per Hourj
Mltchel Field, N. Y.—Lieutenant
*A1" Williams, navy pilot, establish--
ed two new electrically timed air
speed records over the measured one
kilometer course at Curtis field. Ha
averaged 247 1-2 miles an hour ,ix
four trips over the course, and on one.
flight, aided by a brisk wind from 1
behind, he reached the speed of 2$4
miles an hour.
Quits His Post To Win For Rome)
Rome, Italy.—The government of tbej
independent state of Flume has resign !
ed. The Italian government has re*J
ceived Signor Depoll, vice president
of the assembly of Flume, a letter!
complaining of the delay in settling!
the Flume question having been recelv-j
ed. He said the situation had caused
much Idlscontent. The populace was
suffering greatly through uneinpioyj
ment, and he had repeatedly { ** *
attention of the Italian gove;
the dangerous effect of d«
tliug. the. quuUonat.tMQi.
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