^ suct'o IS tne birthright oi f’!'^'ence lover. And so the \ and kiddies and its , the liome, chuckling softly ^ seen, and plan- then t Saturday night. R. ®Sgs at some ham and degrad- 0 ®^®y’s, and went home Longfellow’s Village '‘lie Badin. ■^>1(1 Sunday to the church soes IT"? ■^»d K- , ^'^ovies Tuesday night ®*^s to the noise.” —J. G. T. ^ L ~ ^ " \j Appreciation ' the lij pPfeciati that a few words \inga worth the pub- "thft n- three years' stand- Of ^ to send you thfs in : We a letter. JOy ^adin 5i'e , *^y thi ^ position to en- ta ^''"’’•hout ■'vhich people elsewhere «t. ’ or have to ble Sir-. of The Badin Jear pay much more with a fine hospital, '5nH ^ ®taff^’^ost up-to-date manner, '"’ot K„ docto Of *'0t -ors and nurses which Many a town three “ 1, ^>mes 1 i* >-OWll Ulici- >such Badin does '^ge of ^ comfort. By taking •la is 0^ ^ liberal policy, this '''' employees of the smT, Company and their =‘re ■aj in T? • ^ depot, "’hich • connection with thi> '“Wer „ ‘s operated by the Tallas- d tt:ii Af ‘^esh Gold' HiU. At ‘fy cost’ ^ ^*‘oduct elsewhere various la-i /''ilk, f: ’ as good, clean, ^*ittermilk, and home- *ch is sold at about forty HOSPITAL t less than the shipped or cream- ery article. ‘’"'^r^dtutrSTonly six cents checks), an Ss’f" «««n and twenty «n« . we are able to ^7"'our'^elverwith’a liberal quantity supply by availing our- of f-«\'^:f;tdHties offered (free of selves of the ^ke- all charge) at th ^allassee Power ”'“”'”T.,e abt.o save much of ^"^.."1- »> '""■ t®’’ ""t n .P Power Company charges The Tallassee Power ^ only a very -asonablejen^^^ houses wjHch ^,^^^„„^ble than the ployees—far moi ..jned elsewhere, same facilities can likewise maintained by the educational tnd is cert^fnly doing great institutions, an , town, things for the advantages may be J: and more appreciated, I am Yours since^rely^ Accidents do not “happen," they are always for the few Sunday School Picnic Nobody can take all the joy out of living as long as that well-known insti tution, the picnic, is still with us. The Badin Methodist Sunday School is just three years old, and this was our third picnic, and if you ask anyone who was there Thursday, August 21, you will find it was the best yet. The sports program was carried out on the school grounds, and opened with a thirty-yard dash by the beginners, which was won by Bernice Burns, first, and Melissa Street, second prize. The fifty-yard race for girls under ten years was won by Evelyn Rockfield, first, and Florence Smith, second; while the same event for boys was carried off by Henry Nachman and Wilson Horton. The fifty-yard race for girls from ten to fifteen was won by Dorothy Frazier and Kathleen Burns; and the boys’ of the same age by Ralph White and Claude Mullis. The prizes for girls over fifteen were taken by Emma Horton and Ethel Powell; and the boys winning in the corresponding race were Meredith Coff man and Landis Burns. Mrs. Adkins won first and Mrs. Bandy second in the ladies’ needle race, while in the ball throwing contest Mrs. Devereaux scored easily first, and Mrs. Nash second. (Baseball managers, please take notice). Girls over fifteen can be watched for diamond material, in more senses than one, for they can throw

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