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Sixteen-Year-Old Girl
Successor to Suzanne
Milo. Lellu Allot, nge.l Blxli'iii, Is
being linllod ns llio tennis pla.ver on
liable of tilling tin* vacancy b*fl by
Suzanne Lenglen, tlie fonnor umnteiir
tennis cbainiiion.
Suzanne admits Hint sin* expeels t<
marry Baldwin N. (“Larky”) Baldwin
of California, anil tliat even now tier
tennis days are over.
Mile. Anet lias been piny lUK tennis
ever since sin* was strong enoii:di I"
bold a raequot, and scoring victories
over older adversaries since sin* was
thirteen years old.
She Is the daughter <>f M. Claude
Anet, well-known author, lb* fully
sympathizes with her iiuibltion to be
come a court, star and fives her tin*
benefit of his amateur success, Just
ns the late M. Lenglen trained Su
zanne.
Mile. Anet attracted little attention
by her early since ses, but experts
began to talk about her as the new
hope when sin* recently won the crl
terium do lawn tennis In a sen at ion
nl victory over Mile. AdamolT, an
Armenian star. Sin* is playing regu
larly In l’arls and on the Itiviern.
Struggle for National
League Pennant Narrow
For several seasons it. has been
agreed and demonstrated that the
struggle for the National league pen
nant lies among four teams with the
other four merely In there to make
possible a 151 game schedule and to
fill up the second division berths.
New York, Chicago, St. I.outs and
Pittsburgh are the actual pennant con
tenders. Cincinnati. Brooklyn, Pos
ton and Philadelphia will lit Into their
old grooves in the second division.
The American league, despite the
supremacy of the New York Yankees,
Ims witnessed the rise and fall of a
number of other clubs, so Unit I lie first
division is not all booked up like a
tourist pullman milll the season gets
well under way. liven the Yanks
tumbled right down into seventh place
when they censed winning for a sea
son.
Mr. Kan l.eftwieh Ihividson. senior,
arrived in Conyers over I la* week end
and except for a brief trip hack over
there to get his diploma, la* is through
ami ready to settle down either to
work or to get marriid. A good paying
job or a rich young lady might appeal
to him—ltowever, both are scarce right
now in Conyers.
Georgia
Railroad
(Stone Momiiain Houle)
TRAVEL BY TRAIN
ECONOMIC A1
RAIN OR SHINE
CONYERS
READ DOWN READ UP
11 ' 5 | 2~j] Schedule || | t { if
I’M I’M I’M |am play 1, 1929 | i*M | I’M jam
710 10 00 :t 25 | 7 (Ml l.v Atlanta Ar 145 085 840
780 10 1S :: 15 |720 j • Decatur " 125 015 820
7 :t(! f3 50 jfT 25 • Scott,tab* " fl 18 f6 10 815
741 fit 54 | I'7 29 •• (’larkston ” fl 11 ft! ofc SlO
752 I (it I 7 j“ Stone Mt. ” 102 558 800
802 fl 12 jf7 IS • lioilaii ”| fl 253 f5 -9 748
810 10 It! 120 i 750 |*‘ Llthonin ”| 12 45 548 738
823 10 50 | 130 | sO7 j” Conyers “j 12 85 533 727
fs 35 |fs 18 I" Almon "jjf 12 24 f7 12
845 Mil! | 5,) | s 3O |” Covington ’’|| 12 12 515 705
fs 55 !fSOSJ fS 40 II" AleOv.v ”l|flC 03 |fsos | f(i 55
910 11 35 I 517 | 552 ||“ Social Or. ”1] 11 54 | 455 | ti 45
(EASTERN TIME)
YOU OWE IT TO YOER FAMILY—
TRAVEL BY TRAIN
Traffic Department
J. P. Blld.l'l'S, General Passenger Agent Atlanta, Ga.
Round trip weekly excursion tickets on sale daily at 1 1-2
regular fares—-Good for 5 days.
Week-end Tickets at 1 1-3 Regular Fare.
THROUGH CAR SERVICE
Local Sleeping Car Between
No. 3 ATLANTA ANI) AUGUSTA No. 1
PULI MAN SLEEPING EAR AND PARIjOR SERVICE
Canary Grass Valuable
for Protein Content |
The following is taken from a write
up of tin* work being done at the
Waseca substation in Minnesota. It j
appeared in tlm Milking Shorthorn,
Journal:
“Another interesting experiment Is;
with fel laris grass, or canary grass. |
This grows in sloughs and wet places,
yielding 10 tons to the acre of grass
(tint has as high protein content as
alfalfa. It roots like quack grass,
growing from the shoots as well as
from seed. If the experiment shows
that tin* grass lias everything claimed
for It by farmers In the county Unit
have grown It, there seems a consld
ecable fulure for canary grass. The
prospect of n Minnesota farmer get
ting Ills wet land caught with grass
yielding ten tons to tlie acre of grass
as nourishing as alfalfa, is even worse
than getting Ids good land seeded
with alfalfa, lids Is always having to
be cut wlicn in* lias oilier farm work
to do.”
Ohio Farmers Walk Many
Miles in Doing Chores
The Ohio farmers walk un average
of 00 miles a month in doing their
chores according to tests made by the
rural economics department, at Ohio
State university. To make this lest
pedometers were worn by the farmers
while doing chores. Of two farmers
with exactly tlie same number ol
hfirses and cows and approximately
the same number of pigs, one farmer
walked 105 miles a month and the
other farmer 4!) miles. The difference
was caused by the relative conveni
ence of the farmstead and facilities
for watering and feeding the stock.
The water pail proved to lie excellent
equipment for inducing the farmers
to walk great distances.
Stray Mule
1 Medium size mule
found at my lot
Sunday. Can he
had for actual ex
penses.
B. F. WHITK
fHE ROCKDALE RECOUP, cuWYKKS, GEORGIA
Wauled Hon no
5 or () Hooms
Apply ii<
Heeord Office
sfgk PENCIL
/ wgj with the
(
EAGLE r-f
mmmo
• . ,
A King
m PR) could buy
JJjljEjplf/ no better
TF you were a King and ordered Goodyear, the world’s
greatest rubber company, to create for the Queen’s car WSSmaB
the strongest and most comfortable riding tires they to
could build even if the price was SI,OOO each, Goodyear
couldn’t make anything better than these Double Eagles.
But there’s more than pride to owning these “tires of tires.”
Actually they’re the greatest safeguards against the possib
ility of tire trouble that have even been put on automobiles
in history of the industry. | psSSjLt
I HUE
1 vm Section Cmisectlw
As for mileage, well, you’ll- have to keep your car and m
drive it hard, fast and far over a lot of bad roads to ever
get these tires to quit. That’s why they’re too good, prac-
tically speaking, for most car-users. They’re a luxury in duubil thick All-Weatif
such instances. * vr s
more than this to Dou
ble Eagles. Every ounce
of material in them is
But, then, we DO buy lots of things better than we need world4 n fa“.4rt h ™bber
to gratify our desire to have the best that money can buy. abETo'Jelfect ye * been
aoootEAE
DOUBLE EAGLES
Most motoring needs are safely and most economically
sss ftaas.-flrs. JMirssar
™ ™ you,
Langford Motor Company
Conyers, ... ... G eorgia
i £?> 11 NETHERLANDS ...
JgV The eSt
''4%s Sandwiches
i Old Style Barbecue
Makes a most delicious Sandwich—in fact, make a
regular meal. A convenient and well managed Road
house on highway no. 12, 3 miles east of Conyers.
We also handle the popular SINCLAIRE Gas and Stand
ard Oils. Continuous service, night and day. Stop by
for picnic lunches and refreshments.
Netherlands Bar-B-Q Stand
CONYERS and COVINGtON HIGHWAY
WEDNESDAY, MAY 22,