The Jackson progress-argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 1915-current, April 08, 1932, Image 8

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Etheridge-Smith Cos. For The Latest In —n Straw Hats We are showing the “Brigham Hopkins” line. NONE BETTER. They are correct in style and straws at prices that are the low- , y J\ est for quality. We have your shape and size. ft / J We also carry a line of lower priced Straw / Hats. Come in and let us show you. / ETHERIDGE-SMITH CO. ETHERIDGE-SMITH CO. For the Biggest Stock of Best Makes of Shoes and Slippers in Jack son, Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Shoes, made by the reputa ble makers—such as FJorsheim, Stetson, Bona Allen, Drew, Brownbilt and many others. We fit you for comfort. Etheridge-Smith Cos. Grocery Department For the best in groceries, we have them at prices always the lowest. Don’t fail to get our prices on groceries. We will save you money. EGGS WANTED-EGGS WANTED We want at once One Thousand Dozen of clean No. 1 WHITE EGGS. Highest market price paid IN TRADE. Your due ticket good as money in any department in the store. STARK Rev. Roy Owens, of Jenkinsbuvg, filled his regular appointment at Stark Methodist church Sunday morning and evening with a great toiessage at each service. Mr. J. C. Bartlett was a visitor to Jasper county last week. Rev. and Mrs. T. J. Thaxton and little son, Wilbur, of McDonough, spent Sunday with Mrs. Thaxton’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Singley. Mr. and Mrs. F. 11. Morgan and children, Mr. and Mrs. 1). H. Hollo way and children were visitors Sun day of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Vaughn, near Old Bethel. Mr. and Mrs. W. 1.. White were guests Sunday of Mi. and Mrs. Carl \AI dollar do double duty. Twice as much for your money is no small matter when you Rk consider the well balanced assortment of standard fA-: .1 f publications which are entertaining, instructive, and en * jovable in the widest variety. We have made it easy ► for sou -simple select the club vou want and send or 9HflK| * bring this coupon to our office TODAY. ; I f SPECIAL CUB No. A-J drWl* * Prorressive Former. 1 >cr I * Home Friend. I ve*r ALL SEVEN ■■■> • I ► tiood Storieo, 1 ycur r.iR ovi V /'I , tientlewoman Mosoiine. t Tear r L, l MB . American Poultry Journal, 1 year m ■ The F'arm Journal, 1 year 1 |§|jS§ri l AND THIS NEWSPAPER 4> I = §ltaljSaßßll| > For One Your Jllfiwi * SPECIAL CLUB No. A-4 *■ *fifoKka Dili* Poultry Journal. 1 year Home Friend. 1 year "k lllaMrated Mechanics, 1 year ATI. SEVEN I Home Circle. 1 year leuß c\v 1 V ► Food Stonea. 1 year I * UK |SaBBaBM > Country Home. I year dt* Jl OC WQmga&M u (Formerly Farm A Firoaidei OI T .03 ► AND THIS NEWSPAPER 1 = y For One Year I > , | MHf■■■■■■■■■ *■■■■■■ *mm > fcSftra; Yes aaeVK. EDITOR. Sen Bargain No to 41 bUglKl ► KJLjpßn | Name—. J jflj y Town a RRrTM ► OUaJ ► State r R. F. D ' Br.ng or mr.il to offtca today—NOW FOR SHIRTS Don’t wait until you get down to your last shirt. We have a shipment just in of the well known No-Fade Shirts at much lower prices. Neck bands and collars attached, fancies and plain whites. Your sleeve length and neck size in stock. See our line of Pajamas and Night Shirts. Miss Bettie Carmichael is here to welcome her many friends. Come in and see her. Holifield. Mrs. Nora Cawthon, of Four Points, was a visitor Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Cawthon. Miss Nellie Singley, of Griffin, visited homefolks Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Clark and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Clark. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Wyatt and daughter, Annielu, were visitors Sunday of Dr. and Mrs. John* Har per, of Hampton. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Singley and son, Felton, of Worthville, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cook. Rev. W. B. Underwood and Rev. G. Ashton Smith, of oMnticello, at IHE JACKSON PROGRESS- ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA tended the S. S. Convention of the Kimbell Association at Macedonia last Wednesday. The teachers’ meeting and offi cers council of Macedonia S. S. will hold its monthly meeting Saturday night, April 9, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Jinks. All officers and teachers are urged to be present. The program will be in charge of Mrs. R. V. Jones. The B. Y. P. U. will meet Sunday evening at 7:30. The program will be in charge of Group No. 2, with Mrs. J. R. McMichael as leader. Group No. 4 made the highest grade on last Sunday evening. The people of Stark community wish to extend their heartfelt sym pathy to the family of Mr. J. E McMichael in their recent bereave ment in the death of Mrs. Mc- Michael. May the Dear Lord bless and comfort each of you is our prayer. - , INDIAN SPRINGS Miss Falma Gregory hapepned to a painful accident. While walking she sprained her ankle and was con fined to her home for several days but is now able to walk. Mrs. Mvrtree Arnold Clay, Miss Elizabeth Clay and Miss Lucile Brown, of Atlanta, spent Easter week-end with Mrs. W. H. Arnold. Colds have been prevalent since the cold spell. Mr. and Mrs. Powell and Mrs. King were victims but have recovered. Mr. and Mrs. Cornell, Mrs. Nutt and Miss Mary Cleveland attended the funeral of Mr. R. L. Smith in Macon Saturday. Friends at Indian Springs sympa thize with Mrs. R. L. Smith (nee Miss Rosa Elder) and her daughter, Mrs. Dan Davis, in the death of Mr. Smith. Mrs. Bessie Bryans, Mr. R. W. Watkins, Mr. E. D. Hoard and Mr. Ben Cleveland spent Monday in At lanta. Mr. Bobbie Moss has returned from a visit to Smyrna. • K W JOBS How many wage earners or sala ried employees in this country have stayed on one job as long as twenty years? Probably more than most people realize, but very few equal the record of three employees of a New York lead pencil manufacturing concern. One of them, the credit manager, has worked for the same company for fifty-four years, one of their salesmen has been with them fifty years, and one of the factory men fifty-five years. Ali three are in good health and still in active ser vice. In this same company the aver age length of service of the traveling sales force is over twenty years. Twelve salesmen, still active, have a total of four hundred and eight years of service, an average of thir ty-four years each. Examples like that help correct our idea that we are essentially a restless people, constantly jumping from job to job. These folks who stay on one job continuously may not get so much excitement out of life, but they certainly get more solid satisfaction and security, and if they are thrifty they are very likely to leave larger estates to their heirs than any of the job-jumpers. JEWS It. is difficult for Americans to giasp the full extent of the anti- Jewish prejudice which exists in many parts of Europe. In Germany the Fascist movement led by Adolph Hitler has as a part of its revolu tionary program the expulsion of all Jews from Geormany, and Hitler showed enough strength at the re cent election to cause great alarm among the Jewish population. I have a Jewish friend whose daughter not long ago married a young Jewish banker of Berlin. She wrote home the other day that her husband was closing up his business in Berlin and they were moving to Amsterdam in Holland, and many of the other important Jewish busi ness men and bankers of Germany were looking for more friendly coun tries to move to. When we consider the position oc cupied by Jewish merchants and bankers in America, the honor paid to two great Jews, Cardozo and Bran deis, who are justices of our Su preme Court, the respect in which Jews like Edward Filene of Boston and the late Julius Rosenwald of Chicago, are held, any such program as Hitler’s seems incomprehensible to us. RICHES Henry Ford once told me 'he se cret of making money. It is to man ufacture something which everybody wants, make it cheaper than anybody else can make it, keep on improving the product and reducing the cost of making it, and cut down the retail price every time the cost is cut. That is a rule that has never failed to work, whether the product be au tomobiles, or newspapers, or bread., The lower the price, the wider the market. * I was reminded of this the other day when I saw a notice that the company manufacturing the highest priced automobile in the world has closed its American factory and stop ped trying to do business in this country, while Mr. Ford is announc ing anew car which will be cheaper than anything he has yet put out. The old idea that money can be made only by selling high-priced commodities to the wealthy is re sponsible for a great deal of our present economic difficulty. GREED I am inclined to agree with Prof. Henry G. Russell, of one of the Hartford high schools, who told the Eastern Commercial Teachers’ Asso ciation the other day that the prin- WANTED EGGS STRICTLY CLEAN FRESH NO. 1 GRADED WE PAY THE CASH 100 Lbs. Copeland’s Laying Mash $1.75 100 Lbs. Copeland’s Growing Mash 2.00 100 Lbs. Certified Starting Mash 3.25 100 Lbs. Alco Starting Mash 3.25 100 Lbs. Alco Chix Grain \ 2.50 SCRATCH GRAINS 100 Lbs. Keystone Wheat & Corn 50-50 r 51.75 100 Lbs. Game Cock Wheat & Corn 50-50 1.75 100 Lbs. Red Seal Scratch 1-50 100 Lbs. Cracked Corn & Wheat Mixed 50-50,-- 1.65 DAIRY FEED 100 Lbs. Dairy Feed Guaranteed 16 per cent $1.65' 100 Lbs. Dairy Feed Guaranteed 24 percent 1.85 HORSE AND MULE FEEDS 100 Lbs. Over The Top All Grain Corn Base $1.85 100 Lbs. Mo. Grain All Grain Oat Base 1.75 100 Lbs. Cracker Jack Oats, Corn and Hay 1.50 100 Lbs. Pure Rice Bran Kiln Dried sl.lO 100 Lbs. Pure Soft Winter Wheat Bran 1.25 100 Lbs. Red Dog Shorts 1.75 100 Lbs. Fancy Gray Shorts 1 1.50 100 Lbs. Pulverized Oat Flour 2.00 100 Lbs. Alfalfa Leaf Meal 2.50 100 Lbs. Charcoal All Sizes 1.90 100 Lbs. Pure Oyster Shell Fine or Coarse 1.10 100 Lbs. Meat and Bone Meal Crackling 2.75 100 Lbs. Corn Meal 1.50 100 Lbs. Gluten Feed 2.00 100 Lbs. Linseed Meal 3.00 We carry a complete line of ready mixed feeds and all ingredi ents for the poultry and dairyman. Agents for Blue Ribbon Hatchery, Atlanta, Ga. Premium paid on hatching eggs from pure blood tested flocks. COPELAND FEED STORE COVINGTON STREET JACKSON, GEORGIA cipal thing the matter with our so cial and economic order today is an excess of greed. Dr. Russell warned the Teachers’ Convention that young people must be taught the dangers cf avarice. “Get the money” without regard to how it is got, seems to be the motto of an increasingly large num ber of young men and women. It is this idea, fostered by “success” stories, in print and to a very large extent in the movies, that is at the bottom of the whole system of racketeering. Organized crime is sim ply organized greed. It is still true, as Saint Pault wrote nearly two thousand years ago, that the love of money is the root of all evil. Not money itself, but the love of money. And the only possible cor rective to the tendency to put money above everything else is to change our whole method of teaching the young, so that they will learn that it is possible to live happily without much money—even more happily, for most people, than if they had money. X . A state cigarette tax in Ohio net ted one county 34 cents in two weeks. The acorn crop is appreciated not only by small animals but by bears and deer as well. Aspirin beware of imitations Look for the name Bayer and the word genuine on the package as pictured below when you buy Aspirin. Then you will know that you arc getting the genuine Bayer product thousands of physicians prescribe. Bayer Aspirin is SAFE, as mil lions of users have proved. It does not depress the heart, and no ful after-effects follow its use. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1932 AMERICAN PEOPLE EATING MORE PORK, FIGURES SHOW Pork has made up an increasing proportion of the Nation’s meat diet in the last 10 years, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Fifty-two per cent of all meat con sumed in the United States last year came from hogs. The per capita con sumption of pork last year was 69.6 pounds, compared with 69. v in 1930. A record was established in 1923 and 1924, with 74.7 pounds per capi ta. TIME TO PAY SUBSCRIPTION. Apple Queen Miss Helen Ames Washington of Overbrook, Pa., has been chosen Queen of the Shenandoah Valley Annual Apple-Blossom Festival. Bayer Aspirin is the universal antidote for pains of all kinds. Headaches Colds Sore Throat Rheumatism Neuritis Neuralgia Lumbago Toothache Genuine Bayer Aspirin is sold at all druggists in boxes of 12 and in bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer manu facture of monoacetic addester of salicylicacid.