Newspaper Page Text
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Don’t Rasp Your Throat
With Harsh
'ill Irritants
*JM LUCKY instead J/
Everyone has an Adam’s Apple-Every
man—every woman has one. Touch your
< I Adam’s Apple with your finger. You ere actu-
WtyFmp I y <** ally tcuchin 9 your larynx —this is ycur voice
< : ffi box —it contains your vocal chords. When you
consider your Adam's Apple, consid-
A ; tants present in all raw tobaccos. These ex-
"4 polled irritants are not present In your LUCKY
STRIKE—the modern cigarette. We sell theso
expelled irritants to manufsetyrers of chem
||r\ \- ' leal compounds. Everyone knows that sunshine
v >•>’ \ I mellows —that’s why the 'TOASTiNG" Process
lr V j|i- Includes the use of Ultra Violet Rays. LUCKY
' STRIKE —made of the finest tobaccos—the
° n extra ' secretand exclusive heating process.
It is this process that expels these harsh
Pfjjfcjgg-' ■' f \ Irritants. No wonder 20,679 American physi
cians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating.
Illlife * ! jjrer”' ijSxH lrcL| ' No wonder LUCKIES are always kind to your
ftili’to \ \ / \ s f|Pl throat. And so we say "Consider your Adam’s
' *”'*" ** ‘ araM ,n yOUr ”* ******
64 Xt* toasted** |
including the use of Ultra Violet Rays j
Sunshine Mellows —Heat Purifies ik„., _ _ . .. . .Ji!
Your Throat Protection—against irritation—against cough
J . .1.- ■■— "■ © 1931, The American Tobacco Cos., Mfrs.
J. FOSTER ECKLES
AGENT
FIRE AND TORNADO INSURANCE
JEFFERSON, GEORGIA.
Better Breakfasts
IF you want to start the day
feeling as chirpy as the little
birds in the branches outside your
window, include plenty of fruit
in your breakfast, and lots of
milk and cream. In the follow
ing suggested menu you can have
top milk or cream on your cold
cereal, there is a sauce made of
milk on the sausages and you
can have cream in your hot bev
erage. Most people prefer this
variety of ways to just drinking
milk or cream. Here’s the menu.
Iced Cantaloupe
Cold Cereal
Sausage Slices in Cream Sauce
Strawberry Jam Toast
Hot lieverage
Iced cantaloupe is delicious on
a hot summer morning, and
strawberry jam adds one more
fruit For the main dish make
a white sauce of two tablespoons
butter, two tablespoons flour, one
and one-half cups milk, salt, pep
per and one-fourth teaspoon kit
chen bouquet. Slice the contents
of a 9-ounce can of Vienna sau
sages thin, and add to the sauce.
Reheat and serve on toast. This
will serve six people.
Good Coffee
If you are a lover of coffee and
want that for your hot beverage,
•<“
that is vacuum packed. These
retain all their flavor and aroma,
and assure you coffee *
kick. Nothing is flatter than cof
fee that has been exposed to
oxygen, allowing much of the
flavor and aroma to escape.
DEPARTMENT OF BANKING STATE OF GEORGIA
STATEHENT OF CONDITION OF
BANK OF HOSCHTON
HOSCHTON, GEORGIA.
At Close of Business, June 30, 1931.
AS CALLED FOR BY THE SUPERINTENDENT OF BANKS
H. P. DeLaperriere, Pres. B. F. Wilson, Cashier.
Date of Bank’s Charter, May 3, 1904. Date Began Business, May 4,1904.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts $40,463.68
Banking House and Lot 1,700.00
Furniture and Fixtures 1,960.79
Other Real Estate owned 10,000.00
Cash in Vault and amounts due from approved
Reserve Agents 9,610.77
Checks for Clearing and Due from other Banks 49.85
Cash Items 95.11
Other Resources 1,624.87
Total - - $65,505.07
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock $30,000.00
Surplus Fund 12,000.00
Undivided Profits 1,397.87
Cashiers Checks 15.90
Demand Deposits 17,010.92
Time Certificates of Deposits 5,080.38
Total - $65,505.07
GEORGIA —Jackson County.
Personally appeared before the undersigned, an officer authorized to ad
minister oaths in said county, B. F. Wilson, who, on oath, says that he is
the Cashier of the Bank of llo3chton, bank, and that the above and fore
going report of the condition of said bank is true and correct. %
B. F. WILSON, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 9, day of July, 1931.
R. E. Stewart, N. P. and J. P.
We, the undersigned directors of said bank, do certify that we have
carefully read said report, and that the same is true and correct, accord
ing to the best of our information, knowledge and belief, and that the above
signature of the Cashier of said bank is the true and genuine signature of
that officer.
This 9th day of July, 1931.
H. P. DeLAPERRIERE,
A. L. DeLAPERRIERE,
Directors of said Bank.
Brief News Items
Young Boy Drowned In
Chattahoochee
Slipping from a rock into the wat
ers of the Chattahoochee river Fri
day afternoon, Otis Aiken, 18, of
678 English avenue, unable to swim,
was drowned despite the efforts of
Hoyt Parker, his brother-in-law, to
save him. Attempts at resuscitation
failed.
* • *
Nine Persona Injured In Head-On
Collision
Macon, Ga.—‘Nine persons were
injured in a head-on collision of au
tomobiles at Echeconnec recently.
* * *
Two Girl* Drowned On Georgia
Coast
Brunswick, Ga.—Miss Trudy Cas
sidy, of Marietta, Ga., and Miss El
len McCay, of Atlanta, members of
a swimming party of six at St. Si
mon Island, were drowned today as
they ventured beyond their depth
in the surf.
Both girls were about 18 years
old.
* * *
Automobiles Are Owned By One Out
* Of Every 54
Washington.- -One out of every
64 persons in the world is estimated
by the department of commerce to
have an automobile.
In the United States, however,
there is a car for every 4.69 per
sons, as compared with 4.87 last
year.
The census just completed by the
department shows that a year ago
there was a machine for each 55
per ions in the world.
** ‘ •
Girl Dies At Grave As Brother Is
Buried
Hagerstown, Md.—Elsie V. Stod
dard, 15, collapsed and died at Rosa
Hill cemetery today as the body of
her brother, Walter Stoddard, dirt
track motorcycle champion, was be
ing lowered into a grave.
Stoddard was drowned in the Po
tomac river Friday when a speed
boat he was testing capsized.
Youth Breaks Neck In Park Pool
Atlanta, Ga.— Michael Mackoll,
16, sustained a broken neck Monday
night when his head struck the bot
tom of the Grant park swimming
pool after a plunge from the diving
board.
The boy is at Grady hospital, where
physicians said there was some hope
of saving his life.
Last Dixie Veteran Of Lanier Is
Dead
Valdosta, Ga.—ln the death of
Stephen Lewis at his home in Lake
land last week the last survivor of
the Confederate army, living in La
nier County passed out. Mr. Lewis
was 91 years of age and was widely
known and greatly esteemed in La
nier County.
* * *
Three Negroes Drown In Dougherty
County
Albany, Ga. —Two negro women
and a negro man were drowned in
Kinchafoonee creek near here Sun
day. Johnnie May Jones and Rosa
Lee Mercer were wading when one
stepped into deep water and pulled
the other with her. Jim Jones, broth
er of Johnnie May Jones, was drown
ed while attempting to rescue the
two women.
Retail Store Sales $212 Per Capita
In Georgia
Atlanta, Ga.—lf you are an aver
age Georgian you should buy
$212.32 worth of goods annually in
retail stores.
That is revealed by the Census Bu
reau in Washington. Figures based
on the last enumeration showed that
retail sales in Georgia amount to
$617,543,956, or $212.32 per capita.
It was revealed also that there
are 28,768 retail stores in the state,
or 9.9 stores for every 1,000 Geor
gians.
* * *
Shot On Fourth Of July, M.in Doesn’t
Know It Until Two Day* Later
Chicago.—Matthias Stieren, 36,
was shot and wounded July 4, but
didn’t know it until Monday.
A headache prompted him to call
a physician. He was taken to a
hospital, where a bullet was found
in the fleshy part of his neck.
Stieren remembered that he
thought something had hit him July
4, but paid no attention to it at the
time.
Georgian Is Killed At Baseball
Game
Chattanooga, Tenn.—Homer Brad
ford, 23, of Rising Fawn, Ga., died
in a hospital here Sunday from a
blow on the head from a baseball bat
at Rising Fawn Saturday.
Bradford was standing nerir the
home plate during batting practice
when a player took a vicious swing
at a ball and lost his grip on the
bat, which struck Bradford.
Conditions In The Far
East
All countries of the East are in
a state of unrest, and the world ap
pears to be better prepared for war
as far as armaments and attitude is
concerned than it was in 1913, in
the opinion of Dr. R. P. Brooks,
dean of the School of Commerce,
University of Georgia, who has just
returned from a ten months’ tour of
the would.
All of the countries he visited are
in the grip of the economic depres
sion, Dean Brooks said. He made
a particular study of conditions in
the East, but is in the same
boat with the East, he found. France
is the only exception, and the fact
that France is in better condition
economically than her neighbors and
the United States is perhaps due to
her self-sufficiency, Dean Brooks
said. France imports very little
goods, her people are frugal, and the
credit system there is not stretched
to the uttermost by unrestrained
buying. The people live within their
means, and the nation is not de
pendent. upon world trade conditions.
Dean Brooks remarked, incidentally,
that France is determined to collect
the reparations from Germany and
will exert all available pressure to do
so.
The Eastern countries are in a
political ferment, partly due to the
self-determination of nations idea
let loose on the world at Versailles,
Dean Brooks said. Every country
he visited wants to rid itself of
foreign overlordship, or interference.
China is still engaged in internal
strife, but the people are opposed to
the foreign yoke, as exemplified in
the extra-territorality rights which
the world powers have arogated to
themselves. Once China is freed of
its internal troubles, the people will
be doing something about that situa
tion.
India, of course, is the outstand
ing country in the group that is
struggling for independence, and
the program there is more definite,
better organized and more ably sup
ported, Dean Brooks found. The
spirit of nationalism is rampant
everywhere, and the war spirit is
stronger than it has been in any
period of peace in recent history.
MAN REVIVES 9 HOURS AFTER
HEART AND BLOOD FLOW STOP
Philadelphia. Believed drowned
after five minutes at the bottom of
Laurel Lake, N. J., William Dugan
was alive and well Wednesday. F’or
nine hours physicians and nurses at
a hospital made efforts to revive
him although his heart and pulse
had seemingly stopped.
He was wrapped in blankets, lined
with hot water bottles, was given
frequent hypodermics and inhala
tors were used. Finally he sighed
and opened his eyes.
“It was so comfortable just resting
in space,” he said. “Yet I had a feel
ing I had to rouse myself, to make
an effort to go somewhere. Then,
from a great distance I heard my
mother calling and I had to answer
her. After a great effort I opened
my eyes.”
He had a feeling of “oblivion
peaceful oblivion and a long sleep in
which there were no dreams be
fore he heard his mother calling and
rallied.
Describing his sensations on fall
ing from a boat and being stunned,
Dugan said:
“I felt myself going down and
down and down. Brilliant lights
danced before my eyes, flashing in
varied colors. Then I hit the muddy
bottom and all went black.
“I don’t know another thing that
happened until I had the sensation,
hours later, of floating in air and
that someone wanted me to do
something, someone I couldn’t dis
appoint. Then 1 came out of it.”
R. F. D. NO. 5
Last Week’s Locals.
Mrs. T. A. spent Monday
with her son, Mr. W. T. Mauldin.
Mr. and Mrs. Odell Potts visited
relatives here last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Jackson
visited the former’s father, Mr. Jess
Jackson, Sunday.
Miss June Potts spent Saturday
night with Miss Doris Massey.
Miss Emilia Mitchell spent part of
last week with Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
Payne.
Mr. Rache Venable and family
spent the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Venable.
Misses Nita Potts and Hattie Thur
mond from Charlotte, N. C., are
spending awhile with relatives and
friends here.
Miss Nell Webb spent Saturday
night with Miss Fleta Massey.
Mrs. Hubert Wilhite and Mrs.
Susie Mahaffey were the guests of
Mrs. Claud Venable Monday even
ing- . .