Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1932
BUSY CORNER BEAUTY SBOPPE
•
WHY NOT TRY
ONE OF THOSE
HOT Oil '
TREATMENTS
FOR THE HAIR?
They make you feel like
new. This new machine
is the marvel of the age.
On account of the Beauty Parlor Con
vention at Savannah
APRIL 4 and 5
our shop will be closed, as Miss Futrell
and Miss Dodson will be in attendance
at the convention.
Busy Corner Beauty Shoppe
JACKSON, GEORGIA
Lifters
SERMONS IN THE FLESH
“Put your faith in God, your fam
ily in the field, your flivver under
the shed, and grow what feed you
need.” That was what Rev. Sam
Smith, a North Carolina colored
preacher, recently took as his text,
and he doubtless preached as good a
sermon as any that has been deliver
ed on the subject. Here’s hoping that
he made his hearers see the evil of
their ways and resolve to set their
feet on the road that leads upward,
out of the slough of one-crop de
spond, to the broad, shining plains
of diversified farming where happi
ness and prosperity abound.
If only better balanced farming
methods were practiced as generally
as they are preached! But every
year brings new converts into the
fold, and one of these days the South
is going to be a veritable Promised
Land, provided an epidemic of back
sliding doesn’t break out. Stores of
profitable farming, retold here, are
sermons that live and breath, and
may their number increase.
Prices of farm products are low,
but G. W. McKinney, of Franklin
Who makes your
Fire Insurance Rate?
Property owners—individually and collectively—create the
conditions which determine the cost of their fire insurance.
There is nothing secret in the making of fire insurance rates.
Several major facts enter into the determination of these charges,
such as construction, occupancy, the quality of private and
public fire protection, exposure from other property and general
loss experience.
ELIMINATE HAZARDS
Stock Fire Insurance Companies maintain bureaus to assist in
eliminating fire hazards or correcting defects which may affect
your rate. The advice of such bureaus is offered to you free of
charge through your insurance agent.
THE NATIONAL BOARD OF FIRE UNDERWRITERS
■*,-y 85 John Street, NEW YORK
CHICAGO, 222 West Adams Street • SAN FRANCISCO , Merchant* Exchange Bldg.
A National Organization of Stock Fire Insurance Companies Established in 1866
These Companies are represented by Capable Agents in your community.
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County, Arkansas, goes right on mak
ing a good living and some money
on his 300-acre farm. His flock of
hens and herd of cows keep some
thing coming in the year around.
Legumes on a liberal acreage build
up his soil and feed his stock. He
paid cash for anew automobile, last
summer, out of profits made on his
farm during the first six months of
the fear.
In the heart of the cotton belt,
Oscar Keener has run his 540-acre
farm in McDuffie County, Georgia,
for six years, without growing a stalk
of cotton. He raises feed for large
herds of beef cattle and hogs, and
has surplus hay and corn to sell. He
says that if a man farms to make a
living and not to make money, the
money part will take care of itself.
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Schafer, of
Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, are
getting ahead by selling more than
they buy, and never having to pay
a grocery bill. They believe in haul
ing stuff to instead of from town,
and the grocery store always owes
tnem, sometimes as much as S2OO.
The 11 acres that they devote large
THE JACKSON PROGRESS- ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
ly to truck crops yields a gross in
come of around $6,000 a year. They
grow plenty of feed for the live*
stock and keep up the fertility of;
the soil by turning under green ma
nure crops.
A " 1
1 Platforms of Farmers Runiing ,
For Prosperity
1. A good garden, canned ’vegO-j
tables and fruits, a milk cowVa'fldtlq
of Hens, and a few pigs for‘everyj
farm.
2. Reduce cash expenditures for!
farm operations and receive cash in
come from several farm products.
3. Reduce the cost of maintaining
work stock and the production of
milk, beef, pork, and spring lambs
for market by developing good pas
tures, growing legume hay and ne
cessary grain feeds. Store surplus
hay for future use.
4. Depend more on lime, legumes,
and farm manures for fertilizing
purposes. ,
5. Sow lahd of mediocre fertility
and hill land in grasses and clovers
for grazing and improvement.
6. Terrace hill lands and sow win
ter cover crops to prevent erosion.
Keep farm implements in repair and
under shelter when not in use.
7. Grow cultivated crops on the
best land on the farm, limiting the
acreage of tobacco, corn, cotton,
potatoes, etc., to amount that can be
economcally handled with the men
and horse labor available on the
farm to assure quality as well as
quantity production.
8. Improve the production of live
stock by use of pure-bred sires, by
the sale of inferior animals, and by
better feeding and care.
9. Keep farm records to determine
types of farming that pay best. Pre
pare credit statement for banker and
keep it up to date from year to year.
This practice will put the farm on a
better business basis, aid credit
standing and inspire confidence be
tween banker and farmer.
10. Cooperate with other farmers
in buying needed supplies and in
marketing farm products.
—Recommended by University of
Tennessee.
More grass—less growling.
More cows—less cussing.
More hogs—less howling.
More hens—less hackling.
More fruit—less frowns.
More gardens—less grumbling.
More canning—more chewing.
—John L. Lipe, Havana, Ark.
Cobwebs for moving picture scenes
are made of liquid rubber, ether and
glue.
The term of governor in 23 states
is four years; in 24 states, two
years; in New Jersey three years.
\
ANOTHER
1932
GOODYEAR
Achievement
The buoyant new Goodyear holds so
much more air than a standard tire
that you travel deep-cushioned on
as little as 10 pounds pressure.
YOUR PRESENT WHEELS and TIRES TAKEN in EXCHANGE.
COME SEE and RIDE TODAY!
Settle & Robison
Phone 244 Jackson, Ga.
MBS E. L. VOGEL DIES
IN ATLANTA HOSPITAL
Relatives and friends here were
pained to learn of the death of Mi’s.
E. L. Vogel, 46 years of age, which
occurred at a hospital in Atlanta
Thursday morning, March 24. She
had been ill for several weeks and
death did not come as a surprise.
Mrs. Vogel, who was Miss Myra
Miller before her marriage, was born
and grew to womanhood in Jackson.
She was a daughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. J. R. Miller, esteemed resi
dents of Jackson, the former a well
known Confederate soldier. Follow
ing her father’s death a few years
ago, Mrs. Vogel made her home in
Atlanta.
She is remembered by her friends
as a most attractive young girl. She
possessed a bright and sunny dispo
sition and was admired for her fine
qualities of character. She was a
member of the Methodist church and
was connected with families long
prominent in the affairs of Jackson
and Dalton.
Mrs. Vogel was preceded in death
by her husband. She is survived by
two daughters, Misses Annie Mae
and Georgianne Vogel; a brother,
Mr. J. Harben Miller, of Griffin, and
other relatives.
Funeral services were held at
Spring Hill in Atlanta Friday morn
ing at 10 o’clock, with Rev. L. M.
Twiggs and Rev. J. W. Ham offi
ciating. The body was brought to
Jackson and short services were held
at the grave Friday afternoon. The
pallbearers here were Messrs. G. E.
Mallet, Hugh Mallet, Joel B. Mallet,
J. W. O’Neal, J. C. Newton and H.
O. Ball. Interment was in the family
lot in the Jackson city cemetery.
USES NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING
\
The 066 Salve Contest recently
conducted owes most of its success
to newspaper advertising, says the
Monticello Drug Cos., of Jacksonville,
Fla. No radio or bill boards were
used in this campaign. This contest
was of national scope and thousands
of entries were received from every
state in the union.
ADVERTISING GETS RESULTS
PILLOW
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JANET GAYNOR AND CHARLES
FARRELL IN “DELICIOUS”
Presenting Janet Gay nor and
Chai'les Farrell in the type of ro
mantic drama that has won them
wide acclaim, “Delicious,” their lat
est melody romance, opens at the
Lyric next Monday.
Janet is seen as a Scotch immi
grant lass, enmeshed in a world of
difficulties after she eludes the au
thorities to enter America illegally.
Chief of these is the decision she is
forced to make between two suitors,
one of whom is Charles Farrell who
befriends her after their first meet
ing but succeeds in getting himself
thoroughly misunderstood shortly
thereafter by his attentions to an
other girl.
A splendid cast including FI Bren
del, Raul Roulien, Manya Roberti,
Virginia Cherrill, Olive Tell and
many others are seen in support of
America’s favorite film sweethearts.
BAYER
ASPIRIN
■ 1 ‘ <......
Unless you see the name Bayer and
the word genuine on the package as
pictured above you can never be
sure that you are taking the genuine
Bayer Aspirin that thousands of
physicians prescribe in their daily
practice.
The name Bayer means genuine
Aspirin. It is your guarantee of
purity — your protection against the
David Butler directed from an orig
inal story by Guy Bolton. “Delicious’*
is dramatized to a musical score
written especially for the production,
by George Gershwin.
Friday and Saturday of this week
“The Cisco Kid,” featuring Warner
Baxter and Edmund Lowe will be
shown.
666
LIQUIDS - TABLETS - SALVE
666 Liquid or Tablet* used internally
and 666 Salve externally, makes a
complete and effective treatment
for Colds.
40ST SPEEDY REMEDIES KNOWN
dr.jTb.hopkTns
DENTIST
JACKSON, GA. Phone No. 54
Uninterrupted X-Ray Service Since
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S.H.THORNTON
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AMBULANCE SERVICE
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Genuine Bayer Aspirin promptly
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