The Jackson progress-argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 1915-current, June 23, 1977, Image 12

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CROSSWORD PUZZLE DOWN 1 Uttered 2 Mrs. Copper field 3 State (Fr.) 4 Banished 5 Chew out 6 Solo 7 Make lace 8 Title in India 9 Part of a.m. 10 Indigence 16 Speak in coherently 19 Having the shakes 20 Exclude 21 Super or alter 22 Chance ACROSS 1 European river 5 Gotham City’s protector 11 Mechanical routine 12 Actress Stritch 13 Soviet lake 14 Revolve 15 St. John —, Roman church 17 Composer Rorem 18 Entrances 20 Comport oneself 23 Whitened, as with frost 27 Playing marble 28 Silvers TV role 29 Lasso 30 emptor 31 Honeybee 33 Liturgical vestment 36 Ham it up 40 Kidd or Teach 42 One of the Upani shads 43 Be charm 44 At hand 45 Witty come back 46 Yawn I 2 5 4- jp| 6 1 S 9 10 _ m| n ||p 23 _ 2^ u*® 29 30 ' 40 |jp42 _ ||p 44 45 |||pb Thursday Rites Were Held For Mr. A. 0. Allen Funeral services for Mr. Andrew Oble Allen, 91, of Indian Springs, were held Thursday, June 16, at three o’clock from the chapel of Sherrell Funeral Home with Rev. Charles McCrackin officiating. Interment was in Westview Cemetery in At lanta. Mr. Allen died Tuesday, June 14, at West bury Medical Care Home in McDonough. Born June 20,1885 in Henry County, he was son of the late Perry Allen and the late Edna Tollerson Allen. He was a retired automobile dealer and was a member of Jackson United Methodist Church. Mr.Allen is survived by his wife, Mrs. Jewell Boggs Allen of Indian Springs; one daughter, Mrs. Esther Kea leen of Tacoma, Washing ton; three granddaughters; several great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. Pallbearers were Melvin Massengale, Grady Allen, Billy Moore, Dick Smith, Tim Allen, Perry Allen. Sherrell Funeral Home was in charge of arrange ments. |\Ajliy There’s anew look at our motor bank ... we’ve *** installed the faster, easier-to-operate Tel-Air Iti system for your convenience. You’ll like the clear 9vll voice communication and direct visual contact yy. with our window teller. Fast, pneumatic tube 11IULUL (Jell £££.l.l 111 carrier-units speed transactions and whisk you m __ A on your way. Next time you’re in a hurry, visit our motor bank. transactions l,m,,tekebni Mclntosh State Bank WHERE THE FOCUS IS ON YOU member fdic _ , . - Answer To Today’s Puzzle on Back Page 33 Rich Little, eg -34 Row 35 Enfant terrible 37 Cruising 38 Fellow 39 Biblical weed 41 I love (Lai) 24 Mexican cheer 25 Initials denoting an alias 26 Nonsense 28 Curse 30 Hidden 32 Heli copter part AT THE HOSPITAL Patients at Sylvan Grove Hospital during the period June 14-21 include: George King, Peggy Cook, Nellie Leverett, Frank Steph ens, Howell McMichael, Davis Johns. Lessie B. Taylor, Colum bus Jones, Christine Stewart, Clem Thaxton, J. B. Lamar, J. C. Post, B. O. Cleveland, H. M. Fletcher, Delia Watkins. Set down financial roots. Take stock in America. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds. THE JACKSON PROGRESS-ARGUS. JACKSON. GEORGIA Voices Out of the Past Dr. Talmadge, one of the greatest public orators, in one of his sermons on the “Spirit of the Press,” said: “To publish a newspaper requires the skill, the precision, the boldness, the vigilance, the strategy of a commander-in-chief. To edit a newspaper requires that one be a statesman, an essayist, a geographer, a statistician and, in acquisi tion, encyclopediac. “To man, to govern, to propel a newspaper until it shall be a fixed institution, a national fact, demands more qualities than any other business on earth. If you feel like starting a newspaper, secular or religious, under stand that you are being threatened with softness of the brain or lunacy, and throwing your pocketbook into your wife’s lap, start for some insane asylum before you do something desper ate.”—Butts Cos. Progress, June 13, 1913. A popular form of govern ment for the young people of the city are the theater parties at the Vendome. This popular show place is presenting some splendid programs and is enjoying a large patronage. Under the new management the movies are better than ever and the pictures each evening afford an hour of entertainment to an amusement-loving pub lic.”—Butts Cos. Progress, Sept. 12, 1913. A school master once said to his pupils that to the boy who made the best piece of composition in five minutes on how to overcome habit, he would give a prize. When the time had expired a lad of nine stood up and said: “Well, sir, habit is hard to overcome. If you take off the first letter, it does not change “abit.” If you take off another letter, you still have another “bit” left. If you take off still another, the whole of “it” remains. If you take off another, it is not totally used up. All of which goes to show that if you want to get rid of habit, you must throw it off altogether.”—Butts Cos. Pro gress, Oct. 31, 1913. The ring of the anvils! Such music! Like the melodious whispers that sometimes emanate from Alhambra, so graphically described by Washington Irving. The music of the anvils! How deliciously suggestive of a happy life in rural districts of the peaceful country that we so well remember but which we failed to appreciate at its true worth. How deliciously happy were those days of our boyhood when we had no cares but to play hooky from our duty—when the threatening antics of a chop axe were unknown, but a healthy seasoned hickory switch was administered with more telling effect than some modern acquaintances know how to use a hammer on an anvil. How melodiously suggestive of a rushing business is the musical ring of the anvils as the music emanates from the shops of G. W. Kinsman, Tom Thurston and J. A. Kimbell. —The Jacksonian, May 10, 1907. We lost six or eight subscribers last week, but we are forcibly persuaded this week that we haven’t lost any readers.—The Jacksonian, May 10, 1907. Among a lot of good things that Governor Hoke Smith said at Carrollton on the opening of the A. & M. School were these: “All we can get out of life after a naked living is doing something for somebody else. It isn’t just the dollars you put in the safe. You might cover a man all over with gold dollars and leave him there in that condition; he hasn’t the elements of happiness. If you teach him how to be of service and lead him out where he is doing something for himself, you light in his heart a flame that leads him to glorious advantages, to Heavenly aspirations; you make him just a little after the image of his maker, you shape his life just a little toward the man of Galilee, and you give him a capacity for the highest earthly joys.”—Butts Cos. Progress, Feb. 6, 1908. The man who does not advertise because his grand father did not, ought to wear knee breeches and a queue. The man who does not advertise because it costs money, should quit paying rent for the same reason. The man who does not advertise because he tried it and failed should throw away his cigar because the light went out. The man who does not advertise because he doesn’t know how himself, ought to stop eating because he can’t cook. The man who does not advertise because somebody said it did not pay, ought to believe that the world is round because the ancients said it was flat.—Butts Cos. Progress, April 9, 1908. Booklet Helps Users of Hearing Aids Perhaps you or someone you know has been having trouble hearing clearly. The answer is a hearing aid, right? Only maybe. There are some hearing problems that cannot be improved by a hearing aid, and you would just be wasting your money to buy one. And the amount of money is substantial since hearing aids cost between S3OO and $450. The, Food and Drug Administration warns that the best thing to do if you suspect that you have a hearing loss is to go to the doctor. He or she will give you an examination to find the cause of the hearing loss. In some cases, your hearing can be improved by medication or surgery. If the doctor says a hearing aid may help, see if you can find a dealer who will rent you an aid for a month or two. That way you can try it out to see if you are comfortable with it and whether it will really help. The Food and Drug Administration has new regulations dealing with hearing aids. To learn more get a copy of Making Sure Hearing Aids Help. Single copies are free by sending a postcard to the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 639 E, Pueblo, Colorado 81009. Here are some things that The Furniture Shop 123 N. Hill St., Downtown Griffin GOING OUJ OF BUSINESS Entire Stock Is Included Clearance Sale Begins Friday, June 24th 9:00 A.M. Until All Stock Is LIQUIDATED Don't Wait - Choose from our selection of famous brand name home furnishings and appliances Living Room Den Groups Bassett Lank Lawson Dunning Ken Campbell Broyhill Silver All New- First Quality Merchandise Priced To Move - Prices You Won’t Believe Terms: All Items On A First Come Basis ★ Delivery will be available at a nominal charge subject to scheduling ★ Budget financing will be available ★ All merchandise with full warranty THURSDAY. JUNE 23, 19Z7 a hearing aid can and cannot do: It is basically just a little amplifier so it cannot restore poor hearing to normal hearing and it cannot arrest the progress of hearing loss. A hearing aid will rarely reduce and may increase distortion in the speech heard by those with a hearing problem. And often it will not help you to understand conversa tions better in noisy situa tions or in groups. Despite these limitations, hearing aids will help many people. But before anything can be done to help people with a hearing loss, they must accept the fact that there is a problem, and seek help. 4 02. y Solarcaine Spray |$ 169 100’S Bufferin Tablets $;1 39 mm 10 Oz. A Johnson’s fglßaby Oil sst 9 Bedroom Groups and Bedding Carolina Vaughn-Bassett Webb Coleman DeSoto Standard Spring Air Bedding So if you think you have a hearing problem, go to the doctor. Making Sure Hearing Aids Help (free) is one of more than 200 federal publications of consumer interest listed in the Spring edition of the Consumer Information Cata log. Published quarterly by the Consumer Information Center of the General Services Administration, the Catalog is free from the Consumer Informations Cen ter, Pueblo, Colorado 81009. Magnetic Reach The sun’s magnetic field reaches far beyond its north and south poles, probably as far as the orbit of Pluto —nearly four billion miles away. 8 Oz. 1/ Tropical Blend Oil or Lotion |i| sl"g| Band-Aid [y Brand I Sheer or Plastic Strips 50 Assorted or I Vbooming bargains / . AT THIS 1/ 1 GOOD NEIGHBOR PHARMACY SERVICE DISCOUNT DRUGS DAY; 775-4348 NIGHTj 775-72041 Dinettes and Dining Room Groups Virginia House Keller Parrish Duchess Beauty Queen Metal Cabinets The Furniture Shop 123 North Hill Griffin. Ga. - Phone 227-4600 *ANr •twr | *ns | Don't store onions and pota toes together. Onions can sprout or rot in the moisture potatoes give off. Store onions in a cool, dry place. \ 5 Oz. Colgate Toothpaste 79* Colgate^ Metamucil 16’s Instant Mix or 7 02. Powder P=l dJ-449 ’j il tlfirnicii .. | > 50’S Wash-Up Moist Towelettes 891 “ON THE SQUARE” Open July 4th 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.; 1977 Model Television Appliances Speed Queen Stainless Steel Washers & Dryers Crosley Refrigerators Freezers Litton Microwave Ovens Quasar Color Consoles Color Portables Black & White Portables