The Cordele dispatch. (Cordele, Georgia) 1926-1971, April 08, 1926, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO WASHINGTON, April B—(P)— While the big prohibition show was on today before the senate prohibi tion committee, a strident voice call ed attention to the merits of the senate civil service committee as a side attraction for those looking for that kind of excitement. There, Senator Couzens, republi can, Michigan, was down in black and white as announcing to the world that he would not sit as chair man while Wayne B. Wheeler of the Anti-Saloon League addreszed the committee, Mr. Wheeler vesterday was in vited by one of the committee mem hers te testify on a bill to place pro hibition agents under the civil ser vice. “Not while lam chairman,” Mr Couzens said. “If senators want to hear him I'll go out and some onc vlse mayv take the chair. No man of Wheeler's character and methods een enme hefore any committee 1 may have anything to do with or as ociation with me in any way.” Mr. Wheeler wag nresent and with others he was excluded when the ecommittee deeided to go into execu tive session. J Macon Military Unit May Visit Philadelphia " TFor Sesqui Centennial MACON, Ga,, April B~The Ma con Valunteers, Macon’s aldezt mili farv eomnany, probahly will aceent the invitation to attend the sesani centenrial celebration in Philadel - phia, Juna 14-16, Two invitations were extended last rioht by Captain James A. B. Fran ciceus, secretary of the centennial. Cariain T. W. Parker could not promize definitely that the com ranv would attend, because of the nroximity of the national guard en ramrment {o the dates of the cele-- bration, but the officers agreed that it would he a wonderful trip for the men and it is believed entirely pos gible that they will go. ———— Lightning Tonites Four Qil Tanks In California SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.,, Apri! B.—Four oil storage reservoirs con iainine a total of 3,700,700 barvels of erude oil, burned south of here teday, after one of the tanks had been struck by lightning. Several hundred men constructed dvkes to prevent spread of the fames to fifty tanks of similar ca pacily on the farm. The fire is said to be the greatest in the history of the American oil industry. i Ww of B P sLAUL | L QJE.A'ENS flfli} N UutlL, - s o “np: L . o Ti:" mokes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dunce with delight. Away go the aches and pains, the corns, callouses, bhsters and bunions. “Tiz"” draws out the acids and poie sons that puff up your feet. No maiter how hard you work, how long yon nce, how far you walk, or b 13 you remain on your feet, ®Ti2" bri itstful foot comfort. i WG ul for tired, ache g, sw marting feet. © Your feet just tingie for joy; shoes never hurt or secm tight, Get a box of “Tiz” now from any drug or depariment store. find foot torture forever—wear | smaller shoes, keep your feet fresh, sweet and happy. LOOK GIRLS Just received new shipment the prettiest line of Girls’ Memory -~ Books. ; And Easter Greeting Cards k LR OVERBY : Art Store and News Stand . l Suwanee Hotel Building . . CORDELE, GA. H. THOMAS AMASON CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT 413-414 Wynne-Claughton ' Building TELEPHONE WALNUT 6921 | Atlanta, Ga. Quick Acti ‘ Nit Gi itrogen Gives e Some very interesting resulis were secured in a County ‘‘s-Acre Cotton Contest” last year. Eighteen men from all sections of the County com peted, and their composite results are of general interest because of the vari ety of conditions under which they were obtained. It was found, according to the County Agent, that it paid to use at least 400 to 600 pounds of a high grade fertilizer and that such a fer tilizer, with at least two per cent of the Nitrogen “from a quick acting source like Nitrate of Soda, gave the best results.” Where 200 pounds of Soda together with 400 pounds of fertilizer were put under the cotton, ‘‘ we got an increase of 163 pounds of lint per acre. “In one case,” says the County Agent, “‘where we used 60 pounds of Nitrate of Sofla around cotton after it was chopped, we got an increase of 68 pounds of lint cotton per acre at a net earning of $12.75 per acre. These tests proved that we need to get more of our Ynitrogen from a quick acting source.” These results showed that quick acting Nitrogen set squares earlier and faster and ‘“had a crop set before the dry weather hurt it very much. This is true under dry weather conditions and also under boll weevil conditions.” The weevil question should receive especial attention this year, in view of the fact that infestation is expected to be unusually severe. Successful plant erg in all parts of the South meet this difficulty each year by putting 100 to 200 pounds of Soda and 200 to 300 pounds of Acid under their cotton, and then by applying at first (-hogping a side dressing of 100 pounds of 0((1::;. ) G. 0. P. Convention Maine Votes For Volstead Law PORTLAND, Maine, April 8—(&) — Reaffirming unswerving loyalty to the prohibition eause republicans of the pioneer prohibition state, at their convention went on record acninst repeal or modification of the cighteenth amendment and its supple mental enforcement laws. - The resolution on prohibition caused applause. ‘ “We are proud,” the resolution «aid, “of the fact that our state wag the pioncer prohibitory state of the union. We affirm our unswerving loyalty to the prohibition cause as expressed in the cighteenth amend m(-nrA:m(l laws supplemental thereto and go en record as opposing all at tempts to rereal or weaken them. We pledge our party to strict, im-- partinl and aggressive enforcement of these as well as other laws, both state and national.” | | ! ! ity | Pain and congestion is gone. Quickly >—Yes. Almost instant relief from chest colds, sore throat, back- | . ache, lumbago fol- | L lows a gentle rub- | bing with St | , Jacobs Oil. ; Rub this soothing, penetrating oil right y on your chest and N like magic relief ) o comes. St. Jacobs e Oil is a harmless 3 fl ) liniment which = quickly breaks chest [~~~ &\ colds, soothes the W 4 inflammation of | /R sore throat and : Iy breaks up the con- | © gestion that causes pain. It never dis appoints and does not burn the skin. Get a 35 cent bottle of St. Jacobs Oil at any drug store. It has been recommended for 65 years. | » o -\D._T”Am“ | RAILROAD SCHEDULES CORDELE, GILORGIA wrrival and Departure or Passenger Traing, Cordele Union Depot che following schedule rigures puo ished as Information. Southern Nallway System ‘ —Departure I:2Bam Macon-Atlanta 3:4oan Y.lodin Jucksonville 5:27am boalam Jacksonville-Palatka I:23xm 2:4opm Jacksonville-Palatka 2:lspm B:27Tam Atl-Cinn-Chicago 2:25am T'42am Valdosta 7:sopm e e ee,eet e e e e I:37am Hamp-Tampa-St, P, 5:32pm 5:32pm Atl.-Cinn.-Chicago 11:37am :50pm Macon 7:42am Atlanta, Birminghnam & Atlautle Rallway 4:4oam Atlanta-Birmingham 12:40am Arrives— . =—Departs 2:4oam Waycross-Brunswick 4:4oam 2:53pm Atlanta I:sopm 2:4oam Moultrie-Thomasville 4:4oam I:4opm Waycross 3:oopm 2:ospm Macou-Atlanta 2:oopm eorgia Southwestera & Gulf R. R, SDArIS— —Arrivps 9:lsam Albany Local 7:lopm dopm .-\lb')'-'l‘hua'\'lllv-B'nb'g S dapn {ospm Aibany-Moultrie 2:35pm I:ospm Albany-Dothan 2:Kpm *EABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY parture CORRDELR ARRIVAL _FOR FROM 7:40 AM Americus and Local 11:18 AM 05 PM Mointg'ery and local 2401 1115 PM Savannah and La.al 2:45 P) 'R ABBEVILE FROW 15 AM Ocilla and Local 1:05 PM R RICHLLAND FRQM 35 PM Montg'ery and local 11:25 AM 30 AM Savannah and Local 4:25 FM ':RQ AM Columbus and Local 4:4¢ PM 11:26 AM Helena and Local 7:35 AM 11-L.l' Y : AHIS " Bt % DOLLING UP THE HUMBLE POTATO Four Unusual Recipes by Four Faneous Cooks : Don’t think that after you've gserved potatoes n}ashed, creamed, and fried you've put them through all their paces. You don’t have to begin re peating the old story. There are many de aLf.: lightful ways = of preparing » the humble spud, as several famous cooks have discov o - Gred Ther M ' tually glorify this homely American vege table! Tamalpais Potatoes Tamalpais Potatoes. Doesn’'t the very name make your mouth water! This delicious dish, prcpared from left-over potatoes, is a favorite with Mrs. Belle De Graf, San Irancisce home economics counsellor and writer, Chop fine 8 cups cold boiled pota toes. Add 34 cup of cream, and salt and pepper to taste. Pack very sol idly in buttered custard cups, or muflin pans. Set in a pan in a very hot oven. Bake 30 minutes, or until golden brown crust has formed which will hold the potatoes to gether. Turn out in (Individua!l wolds, ) Baked Poiaio oy Mre. Sarah 1. LRocer, Putindeiphis cooking expert, adds two or ihres artful teuches to baked potatoes wiiich make them taste unusguuily &OOLU “After scrubbing large, perfect po tatoes, 1 soak them an hour in coid weier,” she says. “lI bake them on the upper graic of a medium oveén, and turn them afier 20 minutes, 1 let them boke enother half hour, or until they fcel aoit when pressed in a napkin. “Never try them with a fork, {oz this allows the steam to escape and rmolkes them heavy., Serve in a nap din at once. ‘“The secret ¢f gooud baked poia toes is a slow oven; for o hot oven bardens the skin at once and makes tie potatoes soggy.” - i D, Stuffed and Browned Miss Margaret Allen Hall, nutri« tion expert at the Battle Creek Coi lege of Home Economics, has a de cided preference for stuffed potatoes. She fixes them like this: 6 medium-sized potatoes % cup milk or cream 8 tablespoonfuls butter 1 teaspoon salt Select well-shaped potatoes about equal size. Bake until soft, then cut or break each potato at about the middle. Remove the contents, mash, add salt, butter, and sufficient cream or milk to eause the potato to beat up light, When very light, 11l skins with the seasoned potato, plling It up in f{rrogular shapes. Seot the stuffed potatoes In oven a few min wutes to brown. ‘ a la Pittsburgh " Mrs, Eate Brew Vaughn, home economics director, of Los Angeles, teaches cooking to 100,000 women overy year. Her Pittsburgh Pots toes are rich enough to gserve as the only cooked luncheon dish, she saya & eorved with a good salad thew provide a delleicus meal, Hero {8 her recipe: 1 'lb, potatoes 1 cup grated cheese 1 diced pimento % cup bread crumds 4 tablezpoons buttey & otaMespoons tlour Leyp il jalt and BHevpar pice potatoes and boil unti) soft. 1 a layey of potatues in baking dizh surinki with pgrated cheese, sall, pepper, butter and chopped pi mentos, Add another layer of pota toes and repeqit with cheese and pi mento. Pour over this one cup white saucce. Cover with buttered bread crumbs. Bake in oven until well browned on top. Prepare the white sauce by melt ing two tablespoonfuls butter, and stirring in flour until smooth (2 tablespoonfuls), then add one cupful milk and salt and pepper. S ¥y There you are! Four tempting potato recipes, all easy to prepare, favorites of four famous cooking specialists. Try them on your fam ily. They will welcome these unique variations of the potato theme. — (Watch next weck for another interesting cooking article.) For Oil Stove Users Women who cook with oil will appreciate one of the newer oil stove models with a reversible, easily filled glass reservoir. The hands do not come in contact with the kerosene at all, Whitens Hends Before using rubber gloves sprinkle baking soda inside. You'll find them easy to remove, and your hands will be whitened, When to Use Salt Underground vegetables, the roots or stems of plants, should be cooked in boiling unsalted water. They contain a certain amount of weedy fiber which {s hardened by salt. Balt them when ready to serve, “Top ground"” vegetables, such as peas, beans, cabbage, u.?& onions, are much bettgo cooked in bol!gl'( salted water. oked this way y retain their color, and their flavor ia intensified. THE CORDELE DISPATCH Florida Land Embezzler ] Held By Gotham Police] NEW YORK, April B—(#’)—Her-‘: man Hesse, 45, alleged embezzler of $6,000 from the Florida Agricultural Company, of Jacksonville, Fla., was held under $lO,OOO bail today aftcr arraignment in Tombs court. | Hesse will be given a hearing April 19. He was arrested through a cir cular sent out by the sheriff of Du val county, Florida. The embezzle ment is supposed to have occurred last December. Hesse denied the charges, declar--| ing he came here to seck a positionj after resigning as bookkeeper for the Florida firm. He said he was willing to return and fight the charges. . Sae ST ! “Dude” Tourists Replace : Cattle On Many Ranches| _— | WASHINGTON, April B—(P)— “Dudes” from the east have dis-, placed cattle as the mainstay of ‘many western ranches house pub-' lic lands committee was informed to-' day. | A “dude ranch” proprietor, C. C. Moore, of Dubois, Wyoming, said tha‘t vacationists seeking scenery and recreation are more rrofitable, and more easily handled and satizfied than cattle seeking forage. | rf“\" | l‘ i | Vi G ’ ii " : ' R fi T i Left to vight—MlSS ROS;A MICHAELIS, New Orleans; MRS. SARAK 1 fRLE andli | ARt MRS, BELLE DEGRAS S Fo et peite S/ALLEN. Bostons ‘j H ‘ ! \vi i % HALL, Basile Creck; and MRS, KATE B. VAUGHN, Los Angeles. i v’ it it i‘ j i l. l,g i'i,’ml ’ ‘ U g U .. 2R, \ : it ~;,,5,- }' i i fb s s<o Ul § i 7\ s‘\‘ *, '(\ \;){o ; {;l &8 ‘..:v‘ & 3t e~ P = " N gWA 5 A W Vg N u’ . 7 N 42 Gl S INE e - X k 2 X VSN V 4 WW,"( li . flw‘” NG R B 81, l :i’fff'%% ' — [Re— o " A f.. 4 f i Six fa E i) . » k . |- . - ¥ : "'. ¢ - cooring experts agree Pacific Coast, Gulf of Mexico, New England, /:C-,—;l and Lake Michigan! Six of ile country’s , e, Joremost cooking experts have just completed " ¢ rigorous test of the Perfection Stove. i" f‘fl‘\ HEY used every-method of cooking from . !vying to baking, and were enthusiastic abou: the Perfection. Read what they say. “Whether I broiled steak or French-fried potatoes, the results were fine,” says Mrs. Rorer, famous Philadelphia cocking teacher. Crisp Waffles "My waffies were light and beautifully brown,” says Miss Allen, director of The Bosion School of Cookdry., “They cooked on a hot flame, with yellow tips 1Y inches high above the blue area.” *1 found the Perfection so dependable,” reports Mrs. DeGraf, home economics counsellor, “I left a roast lamb in the oven tor hours. The flame never wavered.” No Scouring Needed “Eggs o la King and broiled tomatoes are delicious enough in themselves,” affirms Miss Hall, nutrition expert, “but twice as delicious to the cook whose kettle bottoms need no scouring. Perfection’s long ¢him neys burn every drop of oil before the heat reaches the cooking, No soot or odor.” b gt ¥V T L 7 f;fi‘urie;l e L . Oil Cook Stoves and Ovens i i : . 5 s -;L;;:;: “: :_; 'y & WARNING: Use only genuine ‘ y sAo }‘, Pert’ecti;lx’x wicks onkfa’,erf.elctlo; oAI o " l ‘. Stoves. They are marked with re Deslérs N T R b tri?z‘ngle.Otherswillcausetrouble. DEMOe;'eSr’i‘Rj:’vl‘lN G e—— |‘\ 5 5 ;b z E latest models '\ : Training Camp At Fort Screven To Use 325th Colors WASHINGTON, April B—(P)— The war department has 'notified‘ Governor Walker, of Georgia, that it has no objection to the use of the colors of the former 325th infantry by the reorganized reserve regiment during the summer training period at Fort Screven. | Reguests for the colors made by Colonel William William M. Wilder. commanding the 325th * regiment, who sought to obtain their loan from the state of Georgia. Colonel Wilder offered to defray the expenses of transferring the colors to Fort Sereven and of return ing them to the adjutant general of Georgia, at Atlanta, as well as guar antecing theie safety meanwhile. L & N TRAINMASTER COMMITS SUICIDE MONTGOMERY, Ala., April 8— (P)—Clarence J. Trantham, train master of the L. & N, railroad at Co lumbia, Tenn., was found dead in his room in the Exchange Hotel here today. ! Ccroner Diffly returned a verdiet that death was due to poison, self administered. Both wrists and his neck were slashed, and two empty Lottles bearing a poison label were found near the body. Florida Wcman Dies COn Werld Cruise In China NEW YORK, April B—(£)—The Belge‘nland returned today from a four. months’ world cruise, during which three of her passengers died. At Shanghai, January 15, Mrs. Ed ward R. Bradley, of Palm Beach. Fla., died of heart trouble. Her body was shipped home on another vesel The bodies of William Rishares, who died at sea March 7, and S. B. Turn bull, of ReZbank, N. J., who died of a hear. attack at™ Naples, were brought back by the liner. Former Governor Nathan E. Ken dall, of lowa, boarded the Belgen land at Naples with the bedy of his wife who died there of apoplexy. Chicago Street Paving To Have Concave Surface CHICAGO, April B—(P)—Street pavement constructed here afier in Chicago will have a concave surface instead of convex, the. board of lo call improvements has decided. This means that the center of the road way will be lower than the surface of the curbs. John J. Sloan, board president, said that the center draining pave ment is more sanitary over all con ditions of weather, more desirable from a traffic standpoint, and costs less than the convex type. : g . - “Perfection’s long chimneys in “Us’l’ng a Perfection is like cooking with sure clean kettle bottoms,” su:2 gas,” remarks Mrs. Vaughn, domestic Miss Hall of Battle ¢ rick, ecience expert. And Miss Rosa Michaelis “They burn every drop of ilbe is of the same opinion. forethe heat reachestbecool'cl‘%g‘ Tested Cooking Ability i o These are just a few comments made by r"“"““"; the six experts, satisfied with only the best swe @ cool:;ing equipment. They find the 1926 Per- ngfifi?fim # fection fulfills every cooking requirement. o This flame for French-friec What does it mean to you?—That when you Pomoef,” says MIT/S-.KOFGF- It buy a Perfection you get a stove with cooking has yell;o‘f’ t:fis’ ,11’2 fnChe,f high ability tested and proved by experts. gy el B See Perfections Today See the 1926 Perfections at any dealer’s. .:.“- All sizes, from a one-burner model at $7.25 & to a five-burner range at $130.00. You will add your word of praise to that of the experts Si“d today for our free b9°kle‘; when you cook on the newest Perfection. avorite Menus and Recipes c 6 Famous Cooks. PERFECTION STOVE*COMPANY o Atlanta Branch—B Courtland Street P e (.9 cag 41‘ I mffl‘ f.»:"-"_"_f,-": T / g . . . \’é,’ [F . i g S WL/ THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1926 Lankford Asks $500,000 For Civil War Monument WASHINGTON, April B—Erection of a monument here to memorialize the “good feeling and love now ex isting between all parts of our once .divided, but now united nation,” i provided in a bill introduced in.the house Wednesday by Representative Lankford of Georgia. An appropria tion of $500,090 is asked for the purpose. The monument would be in the form of a group of heroic figures of President Abraham Lincoln and U. S. Grant and General Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. The bill provides that erection of the memorial monument he “ap proved of the Daughters of the Con federacy, Grand Army of the Re public and Fine Arts Commission of the District of Columbia.” Lankford designates the exact la cation of the monument and sug zests that the street intersection where it would stand be named “Union Point.” A railway to be constructed. will materially reduce the running time between Madrid and Vigo, Spain. Eighteen new coal and iron nits employing 180,000 men, are to be opened in England. :