badin bulletin
Page Fifteen
«i«u- iiU..ulA
ANOTHER COMMENCEMENT FEATURE
weiffhs nineteen and three-
*^y L'ow was
^''od ° ^ needed more
**pplied to you to help me
"ill b I
''Ites ! 5 “^*’ ^ «ure, to know that he
Jelly *'>'1 toast and oatmeal
"'''•eht continues to pain
“ffi
'Olj,,
**fls
*tk
® ^ate of My Flowers
V (ia l^ohful Ditty
k " garden;
Jocau!”' w«« a hard ’un
\ toe the line.
{■,
Joli
I'Ure
‘dsspi’outed,
U
, r^re “'■® «Pt to do;
«slt Klt'o I shouted—
Vu you?
th
f»i
0)
0 the '‘^°ut ire
‘id’’*''' the^^ '■'“wers faithful,
Wi***’'elv I- “"1 morns,
!. h,. ^hink it hateful
Sweetly rest, oh dainty flowers,
Crushed beneath the painters’ feet;
Far too bright you were for ours;
May eternity be sweet.
After some days briefly mourning,
I took my hoe again.
Still intent upon adorning
My yard and my domain.
Again the fairy flowers were thriving.
Again my heart.was light.
Again was I in joy striving
To make our lives more bright
The same sad story Iirepeat:
The plumbers came one day;
The water they say it was to mete.
As we would have to pay.
Ye too, sweet rest, oh dainty flowers;
A.scend above to join your brothers;
A sad, sweet memory still is ours.
To treasure with the others.
(Jolden memories, oh how sweet.
We loved you much, dear flowers.
You blossomed but too briefly here—
My flowers, oh my flowers!
You ask me will I e’er again
Have another flower plat.
Oh, my dear, beloved friend,
I wouldn’t ask j/oti that!
—W. E. P.
V**»
tuy "■ naieiui
''■0 hand.s sprouted corns.
it on'l early—
^ "'thout ire-
JTi'uff and burly,
® piiint entire.
Mr. ,1. K. Watson, fiG Cedar Street,
lias ini|)roved the appearance of his
home, and cut down his cost of living,
by using the front yard for a vegetable
Harden. If you do not care for flowers,
why not imitate Mr. Watson?
Are You Not Glad
T’/'nf Vou Have Now Found Out That
Columbus Day, the twelfth of October,
is as you all know the anniversary of
the discovery of America. There is a
movement on foot to make it a National
Holiday to be observed by all the peoples
m Alaska and Northern Canada to
Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. Don’t
you hope the Tallassee Power Company
hear about it, and vote for it? We do
More than one hundred years ago
\ olta.re said that in one hundred years
there would not be a single copy of the
Bible on the earth. He was wrong, for
today there are five hundred million
copies .n circulation, and the Geneva
B.ble Society is using the very printing
press on which his infidel prophecy was
issued.
In the first Presidential election, New
^ork, Rhode Island, and North Carolina
did not vote. There had been no con
ventions held, no nominations made, and
no platform adopted. We probably
thought, since there was no excitement
going on. it was not worth while. Do
you know why?
The smallest republic in the world is
Taralara, a small island, seven and a
half miles from Sardinia. It is a little
more than a mile in length, and has a
population of fifty-five. It became a
republic in 1882, and elects its president
for a term of ten years; and the women
vote.
The Lincoln Highway is a good road
which connects New York with San