Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1934.
NOTICE
On account of the weather being so hot, we
are closing our alleys until cooler weather ar
rives, and at that time we will re-open them for
the winter season.
We are planning to have some tournaments
this fall, contesting with Griffin and other nearby
towns, for prizes.
We are grateful for the patronage accorded
us during the hot weather, and will appreciate
your coming to our house of recreation this fall.
JACKSON BOWLING ALLYS
OTHO (Redi PRICK, Mgr.
MONROE SUPERIOR COURT
WILL CONVENE AUGUST 6
The August term of Monroe coun
ty superior court will convene in
Forsyth next Monday with Judge
Ogden Persons presiding. A fairly
heavy docket is in prospect for the
scheduled term of two weeks.
New York City contains 36 islands.
where a slip means death,
Firestone High Speed Tires r- 1 /
were on the winning car. P||
Surely this is the HONOR ROLL uf
amazing proof ever known IIVIIVII I
of Extru Traction—Non-Skid
Safety—and Dependability. FI REST ON E
The new Firestone High HIGH SPEED TIRES I
Speed Tires for 1934 have
■ _ _ . if tor set'en consecutive yearn I
InC lOlipCHl have been on the winning car* I
(read Firestone has ever in the daring Pike’s Peals climb I
made. They have a wider wharmusUp mount death.
iread of flatter contour, THIS MEANS NON-SKID SAFETY
deeper non-skid, more and TRACTION
tougher rubber, giving you ...
r „ A E i * lor fifteen consecutive yearn I
more tlltlfl >0 ,0 t have been on the winning cam I
non-skid mileage. In <>>•■ 500-ntile Indianapolis I
Everv cotton fiber inside Karr
every cord is soaked and THIS MHNS ' LOW <> UT
mated with Extra Rubber * f -, r „, rrr vwir ,
eight additional pounds have been on the 131 bimen of [S
absorbed by every 100 th* Washington ID.c.)
i r .1 ■ *ni • Rallicar and Electric Company I
pounds oi cotton cords, this ..
■ covering 11,35 ,810 bus miles I
iGum-Dipping $ theFireStOnC without one minute'* delay
patented process that due to tire trouble,
provides extra BIoKOUt THIS MEANS DEPENDABILITY
Protection. AND ECONOMY
<ia the .Xciman Motors' ;i ;
CT lord 1-8 Truck that made a 1.
rieir roajf-fo-coosf record of I y
ti? hours, 4 5 minute* • 30 w
I All PCD MAM C E (fi HR seconds actual running time.
lUFIUEK RWn-VhlEl g THIS MEANS ENDURANCE
MILEAGE *L -1
Remember —with every Firestone Tire you get the
Triple Guarantee
—for Unequaied Performance Record*
—for Life Against All Defects
—for 12 Months Against All Road Hsxards*
( * .Si.v Months in Commercial Service)
Call on the nearest Firestone Service Dealer or Serviee
Store today and equip your car with the new Firestone High
Speed Tires for 1934.
WrESTONE CENTURY PROGRESS TIRE
; REDUCED PRICES FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY 9 '"
tin oipsyt * t wia or?' 1 j||g OUTSTANDING
j 4.gn. .. ibltl $5.75 $ .90 $3.60 miiiic IN THE
I AS92I ... 6.30 1.01 4.04 LOW . PWCED F|ELD
! 4.75*19.... T. 78 6.70 1.08 1-32 * .
5.WM9 a/u 7.20 1.14 4.56
‘IC7 8.00 1.27
5.50.17 . 1A.15 8.75 1 .4) | 5.60 Ij <.40-2i |~im*4S
6.00-19 a. r yi.lt 12.45 2.02 8.08
7.00-20 h. and 19.83 17.10 2.73 10.92 gv,. *•
OTHER S>Z C 6 ROOFOiTIQN ATIIY iQW ft on** norcWNAtti Y lQW_]
IWiuU... - - %
I See hotc Firestone TiresX to the Voice of Firestone^
are Made at the Firestone I _ I —Featuring Gladys Suarthout I
Factory and Exhibition I • I —Fvcry Monday .\ight over 1
Building, World's Fairg L>- B. C. —WE A F IS* tig or kg
MOST MILES PER DOLLAR
SPENCER MOTOR CO.
Phone 134 Jackson, Ga.
Fully grown grizzly bears weigh
from 500 to 1000 pounds, yet their
cubs weigh as little as one pound
at birth.
666
Liquid, Tablets. Halve, Nose Drops
Checks Malaric in 3 days, Colds first
day, Headaches or Neuralgia in 30
minutes,
FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC
Most Speedy Remedies Known.
THE JACKSON PROGRESS ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
WONDERFUL PROGRAM
AT PRINCESS NEXT WEEK
“Dr. Monica” with an all-star cast
including Kay Francis, Jean Muir,
Warren William, Verree Teasdale,
will he presented at the Princess
Theatre on next Monday and Tues
day, August 6-7. This unique lov
trama is based on a famous Polish
play, and tells the story of a woman
pnysician whose husband’s love ha.
been stolen by a friend. Each wo
man tries to sacrifice herself for
the other, and in one of the most
dramatic scenes ever screened the
“other woman” flies out to sea in an
almost fuelless airplane. Kay Fran
cis is niagnificicnt in her portryal
of “Dr. Monica,” and Jean Muir, as
the “other woman” shows why she
l’.as advanced so rapidly to stardom.
Warren William makes the difficult
lole of a man who would like to he
true to his wife but cannot resist
temptation. Dealing entirely with
the social elect of New York, the pic
ture is set in the background of
beautiful Long Island Estates, and in,
luxurious apartments. Don’t miss
the thrill of this great picture. Four
great Warner Bros, stars in this sup-
erb production.
On Wednesday and Thursday, Aug
ust 8-9, that popular film “Wild
Gold” with John Boles, Claire Tre
vor, Harry Green and Monroe Ows
ley. Women and men side by side,
digging, loving and fighting in the
new gold rush of today. Gold and
greed bringing night club beauties
and adventurous men dashing and
clashing in a whirlpool of life. You
won’t fail to see John Boles and
Claire Trevor in this striking and
popular drama. “Fox Films Always
Please.”
The Colum'bia Picture “Deception”
will he the offering for Friday and
Saturday, August 10-11. In the cast
for this film ave lovely Barbara
Weeks, Nat Pendleton, Dickie Moore,
Thelma Todd, Leo Carrillo. “Decep
tion” is an entertaining romantic
c’nama played against a background
of professional sports. Although
the athletic scenes are heads and
shoulders above similar shots on the
screen, the principal feature is its
forceful human story of a lad who,
even with the world against him,
didn’t know what it was to cry
“quits.” Little Dickie Moore is a
prime favorite as much so as Shirley
Temple. Both ax - e youthful stars of
the first magnitude.
Home Demonstration News
Miss Evelyn Kent, Agent
Home Canning
Fruits and vegetables are rich in.
minerals and vitamins that are es
sential for good health and proper
giowth. It is estimated that sixty
two per cent of the patent medicines
sold are laxatives. If people would
ngulate their diet with an adequate
supply of fruits and vegetables, af
fording the necessary minerals an i
vitamins, they would not need lax
atives.
In addition to being good regu
lator foods, fruits and vegetables
prevent acidity of the system, neu
tralizing the acids formed in the
system by meats and starches.
During spring and summer there
is a surplus of fruits and vegetables
in the gardens, fields and orchards
of Georgia. If we can this surplus
which would otherwise go to waste,
we shall have a supply of foods
which we need to keep us healthy
and make us grow strong. They
also add variety to our diet. Most
people prefer canned fruits, juices
and vegetables to dried ones. The
canned foods retain their natural
juices and flavors.
Home canned fruits and vege
tables reduce the grocery bill. It
costs less to can them than to buy
them fresh or canned. Products
which would otherwise go to waste
may be canned and sold.
The housewife can put up almost
any kind of fruit or vegetable at
home, which can be kept for many
years without spoiling, if it is real-
a of the hills of I
Habers ham^^^
221- ® summer and see the wonderful hills of Haber-
sham, the beautiful valleys of Hall . . . Here the
f nights are cool and the mountain scenery beau
tiful, with rhododendron and mountain laurel
. adorning the turbulent streams ... Here in beau
tiful Northeast Georgia are Lake Rabun and
M. — — Lake Burton for boating and
fishing; magnificent Neel Gap
r . ■ n , , dations at Clarksville, Clayton,
Jishing on Lake llurton,in Rabun County Blairsville Dahlonega Helen
_ Mountain City and Tallulah
F J. ew J ro , m r S r el G ?, p ’ Hus nwtorist every convenience
*0 Miles Aor In of Gainesville along the W"y New ad'
terezting road maps (in color)
1 *uhll tree ° f ch " te '
‘— ' ESSOLUBE —the modern hydrofined
t and mErativTTißßi Il . as t^le S reat advantage of combin
\*l l iL ■ 1 ** n £ * n one oil the five characteristics
ideal motor lubricant
jr | CROWN STANDARD GASOLINE
((STANDARnII is a P erfectl y balanced gasoline with
FalU ttear Dahlonega all the desir able qualities, plus anti
\JSQ\yfy/ knock properties without added cost
Standard Oil Company
INCORPORATED IN KENTUCKY
ly properly canned. In home can
ning it is economical to use glass,
since it may be used year after
year. The principal point to remem
ber is that heat is the main thing
in preserving. Also that the en
trance of any air whatever will
cause spoilage. Bacteria in the
food must be killed by heat and
then no more air allowed to enter
the jar. The food will then keep
for many years and comes out per
fectly fresh and attractive.
The cold pack method of canning
is no doubt the best for home can
ning. The advantage of the cold
pack methods are that it saves the
time which used to be spent bend
ing over the hot cook stove, and
saves labor since the foods are
handled only once —the time they
are packed into the jars—and it re
sults in a food which is more whole
some and has a better form and
flavor. It is 'both an efficient and
satisfactory method and the only
two vital things to be watched are
that the food is thoroubhly steriliz
ed, and the cans are thoroughly
sealed.
Only sound fruits should be used,
strict cleanliness being observed in
older that sterlization be thorough
beyond question. Advocates of the
intermittent method of processing
say that it is the best method to use
in the South on account of warm,
damp climate which is more favorable
to the development of bacteria.
Another point to remember is
that the storage of canned food its
label say, "store in a cool dry place
it is also a good rule for the home
canner to do the same. Bacteria
do not grow in cool places, so if
any bacteria do remain in the jars
the food is more likely to spoil in a
warm place than if the canned goods
are kept cool.
In canning vegetableSj the thrifty
housewife is able by this method to
serve vegetables and fruits in the
season when they are too expensive
to 'buy and thus she serves the
roughage and vitamins and miner
al foods through the very months
they are most likely to be scarce.
WITH THE CHURCHES
BAPTIST
R. B. HARRISON, Pastor
Hours of Service:
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
Morning Service, 11 a. m.
B. Y. P. U. 6:00 p. m.
Evening service, 7 p. m.
Prayer and Praise Service, 7 p. m.
METHODIST
R. P. ETHERIDGE, Pastor
Sunday School at 9:30 a. m.
Sunday Service at 11 a. m. and
at 7 p. m.
Epworth League 6 p. m.
Prayer Meeting, 7 p. m.
JACKSON PRESBYTERIAN
EUGENE DANIEL, Pastor
Services at 11 a. m. second and
fourth Sundays. No night sendees.
-Sunday school every Sunday a:
10 a. m. All welcome.
Fellowship Church
EUGENE DANIEL, Pastor
Services at 11 a. m. on first Sun
day in each month.
FLOVILLA AND CORK CHURCHES
HARVEY A. KING, Pastor
Preaching at Floviila M. E.
Church, South Second Sunday A. M.
and P. M., also Fourth Sunday P. M.
Cork will have regular services
Second Sunday afternoon instead of
the 4th Sunday afternoon.
PEPPERTON BAPTIST
J. B. STODGHILL, Pastor.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.
Services second and fourth Sunday
nights in each month at i :30 o clock.
WORTHVILLE BAPTIST
J. B. STODGHILL, Pastor.
Services third Sunday and Satur
day before. Services at 3 p. m.
Saturday, at 11 a. m. Sunday.
Sunday school 10 a. m.
PARAN BAPTIST CHURCH
J. B. STODGHILL, Pastor
Preaching fourth Saturday and
Sunday at 11 a. m.
TOWALIGA BAPTIST
REV. BEN INGRAM, Pastor.
Services third Sunday and Satur
day before at 11 a. m. Tba public
invited to attend.
FLOVILLA BAPTIST
Rev. J. F. Anderon, Pastor
Preaching on first and third Sun
days at 11 a .m. and Bp. ra. The
public invited.
Liberty Baptist Church
REV. P. P. MOSELY, Pastor
Preaching second Saturday and
Sunday in each month at 11 a. m.
The public invited to attend.
MACEDONIA BAPTIST
J. H. HAYS, Pastor
Deacons’ meeting Saturday morn
ing before the second Sundays in
each month; preaching services every
second Saturday; Bible school Sun
day p. m. except second Sunday;
morning worship second Sunday 11
a. m.; teachers’ meeting Saturday
night before second Sunday; B. Y.
P. U. program planning meeting
Thursday evening before the third
Sunday in each month.
COUNTY LINE CHURCH
C. C. HEARD, Pastor
Services every first Sunday after
noon at 2:30 and Saturday before
at 11 o’clock.
COUNTY LINE CHURCH
P. P. MOSELY, Pastor
Services on first Sunday and Sat
urday before at 11 a. m. The pub
lic invited to attend.