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Bpj|i i+*jitki WW iiiiPifliil! Neuritis
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F I Backache
| fjj|a ▼ V-, Rheumatism
. (y •I • Fh i • f* Muscular Pairu. •
fjeres Smiling Relief. .. Pcriodic Prin3
Must ; your suffering from-common every-day aches and
„,.* j ; accessary and unwise. Unnecessary, because Dr. Miles’
i £nti ! Pills relieve quickly and without unpleasant after
e o cr i iwise, because pain makes your physical condition worse
(1 ,>f Letter. One pill usually brings relief in a few minutes,
j v u suffer from any of the disorders listed above, take Dr.
jlil’ ' anti -Pain Pills. If they do not give you greater relief in
W; time than anything else you have used, go to your druggist
and your money back.
A i ckage of Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills in your medicine cabi
net pocket, or hand-bag means fewer ..... ng^s^
aches and p*ms. 25 noSES
25 for 2J cents 125 for SI.OO f
' DR.MILES’ W *'*J
ANTI-RUN PBIIS \ vmutk
—■—
J. FOSTER ECKLES
AGENT
FIRE AND TORNADO INSURANCE
JEFFERSON, GEORGIA.
Here's a Suggestion
S~>: 4|
/Vll\ k nollm
*lhm
ARE ypu the conscientious
kind of a person who is al
ways wondering whether
she is doing all the good she
should in the world —or are you
just “dog-gone” sorry for the
people who are out of work? In
either case here is a suggestion
for you.
Get at some local storekeeper
and interest him in “The Barrel
Plan.” it is a simple and very
effective means cf collating food
for the needy. The storekeeper
should be willing to cooperate, for
it increases his sales. This plan
has actually been put Into effect
in several large cities.
“The Barrel Plan”
Have him place a barrel or a
basket near the door of his store
into which shoppers can drop a
Portion of the food they buy.
Canned foods are the best for this
Corn for Energy
}
. 'ls
x s -iir- T>TTrn iknt 41. n
brown mane afloat in
ihe breeze chubby knees
aglow with the tang of the
winsomely awkward as a
t fy colt, with feet that fly as
wst—here comes Mary!
/ ' fl * rl ot tiny glistening steel
fa ® els ~ a little body lovely as the
'■ of Praxiteles—a whirl to the
tht/ a iurn to the left—grace
a would put Fred Astaire to
skates’*-* 1 ' 8 Tommy on bis roller
a burning up energy as
and .. “ urns up gas—it’s spring
—Tnt hey r Just have t 0 GO!—GO!
n. ’ ’ L et them—it’s good for
good for muscles, circula-
Pl!'
purpose—they .are nutritious and
they do not spoil. Suppose a shop
per buys three cans of soup at a
special price. She may be glad to
share her good fortune by drop
ping one of them into the barrel
or basket, and that one can means
the beginning cf a hot dinner for
a small family. Canned vege
tables and evaporated and con
densed milk arc a godsend to the
mother with young children, and
canned fruits supply certain es
sentials of nutrition which the
poor are apt to omit —and for the
lack of which they suffer. It is
better to give food than money,
as one is thus sure that one’s con
tribution will be wisely used.*
tion, appetite. BUT see that the
fuel is replenished. Give them
plenty of nourishing food—corn,
for energy, for instance.
They’ll Love It Like This—
Cream of Corn and Tomato
Soup: Make a white sauce of
three tablespoons of butter, three
tablespoons of flour and three
cups df milk. Stew one 8-ounce
can of corn and one and one-half
cups canned tomatoes for ten
minutes, press through sieve and
add to white sauce. Season and
serve with toasted crackers.
Serves six.
Corn Pudding: Add two beaten
eggs to one No. 2 can com. Then
add half cup milk, one teaspoon
salt and a few grains of pepper.
Cover with buttered crumbs and
take about thirty minutes in a
moderate oven. 350®. Serves six.^
now
TERM “MAD AS A FT VTTIIR”
HAS UNDERGONE CHANGE.
—There has been much specu
lation ns to the original appli
cation of “hatter” In “mad as
a hatter.’’ It U probably mere
ly a corruption of “adder” in
the older phrase “mad us un
adder,” which obviously alludes
to the ostentatious manner In
which the udder shows anger or
Irritation. In Anglo-Saxon and
Old English “mad” was used In
the sense of furious, angry, nnd
even venomous, nnd It Is still
widely used for angry In Eng
lish dialect, ns well as In the
United States. Originally “mad
as a hatter” meant very angry
or furious; now It Is more fre
quently used In the sense of
violently insane. There is prob
ably no truth In the oft-told
story that the phrase originally
referred to a crazy hat-maker
who was elected to the English
parliament from Southwark In
the early part of the Nineteenth
century. It Is sometimes stated
that ‘‘mad ns a hatter” was first
employed in 1863 by Chnrles
Lutwidge Dodgson In ‘‘Alice In
Wonderland.” That is incor
rect. The phrase was used by
Thomas Chandler Ilallburton In
“The Cloekmaker; or The Say
ings nnd Doings of Samuel
Slick of Sllckville,” which was
first published between 1837 and
1840. Hnliburton wrote: “Sis
ter Sail . . . walked out of
the room, as mad as a hatter.”
In 1849 William Makepeace
Thackeray wrote In “Peniien
nis”; “We w-ere . . . chaf
fing Derby Oaks -until he was
mad as n hatter.”—Pathfinder
Magazine.
How Mountain System
of “Andes” Got Name
origin of “Andes” as applied to
a system of mountains in South
America has not been definitely as
certained. It is supposed, however,
that the name is derived from a na
tive Peruvian word meaning copper,
or perhaps metal in general. Accord
ing to the Pan-American union, the
Incas seem to have uScd the words
“Anta,” “Anti,” “Antas,” “Antis” and
“Antisuya” to designate districts in
the mountains where metals existed.
The Spanish conquerors gradually
dropped the “t” and replaced it with
“and” when referring to the mountains
containing minerals. In succeeding
years the entire mountain system be
tween Panama and the Strait *of Ma
gellan became known as the Andos.
Another theory deserves to be men
tioned —namely, that the name of this
mountain chain is a corruption of the
Spanish “anden,” meaning shelf, and
that the name originally referred to
the numerous shelf-like terraces built
by the Incas for agricultural purposes
on the western slopes of the Andes. —
Exchange.
How an Idea Is Born.
We get many an idea for a work
of art which gradually sinks into our
unconsciousness, reaching a condition
which wq think and speak of as for
getfulness. But it continues to figure
in our experiences, mysteriously draw
ing sustenance from them and develop
ing independently of our efforts or
knowledge. And one day it may hap
pen to emerge again out of the depths
of the mind. It is remarkably altered,
and seems to admonish us: Now at
last I am ripe for the purpose which
I was meant to serve from the begin
ning; now for the first time we are
worthy of each other. Let us both
fulfill.our destiny; create your work. —
Arthur Sehnitzler In Vanity Fair.
How Axioms Repeat.
Certain axioms expressed in differ
ent ways are to be found among prac
tically ail peoples and tongues. Take
for instance “Taking coals to New
castle,” referring to the folly of send
ing that product to the point at which
it is mine'’ Horace said; ‘‘lt would
be silly to carry sticks into the for
est.” The Greeks had a proverb about
‘‘carrying owls to Athens,” the city
abounding in those birds. Australians
of today may like to amend It to
“carrying fish to the Hellespont.” And
one could easily invent many more
—such as carrying wheat to the pruir
ies, carrying rock to British Colum
bia, or carrying yarns to the bay of
Fundy.
How Glasa la Graded.
All flat glass contains some Im
perfections and the principle employed
in grading is to exclude all defects
that would be objectionable in a giv
en grade. This is difficult to do since
there are no sharp lines of demarca
tion between grades, nnd experienced
inspectors will differ in judgment ns
the quality of the glass approaches
the limits of the grades. Small lights
must be quite free from imperfections
as compared with larger ones, nnd
the center of any sheet should he
clear, whereas the edge may contain
more pronounced defects.
How to H.trden Potatoes
To harden or petrify potatoes make
a solution of 4 four parts of sulphuric
acid in 50 parts of water. Treat
peeled potatoes with this solution for
36 hours. Dry the mass between blot
ting paper and subject to great pres
sure. By using very strong pressure
billiard bails have been made closely
resembling Ivory. The material can
be carved. \ •
Both Needed
Protectors
By AD SCHUSTER
(Copyright.)
IN THE narrow precincts behind the
cigar stand In the Mnnslon House
Dolly Duble reigned as queen. Dolly
was slender and ornamental. She
knew how to make the best of n com
plexion and n situation and was never
at a loss for words.
The men who came nnd went In
front of her cigar counter, Dolly de
cided, were of a kind. They were so
easily pleased with her nrch banter,
so readily Influenced to purehnse
wares, nnd so confident that they pos
sessed the charms and abilities, should
they care to exorcise them, of break
ing the heart of the saleswoman.
It was Dolly’s purpose to encourage
them In their vanity. As each custom
er regarded himself ns a particular
friend nnd adviser of the appealing
girl, the stand was popular and the
sales mounted.
“Most places,” she said, “they buy
smokes. Here they get hot air
thrown In for good measure nnd I’m
telling you they eat It up.”
When It was suggested that some
day Dolly might forsake the stand to
marry one of these men who leaned
so confidently over her counter, she
shuddered.
“In the first place,” she said, “most
of them are married already. My Idea
of a hero Isn’t the kind who makes
wise cracks In the hotel lobbies. How
would it be to go through life with a
man who thinks you should be tickled
pink every time lie calls you
‘sweetie’?”
“Yes, here you are, Mr. Lansing. I
can never forget the kind of cigars
you smoke.” And Dolly interrupted
her reflections by passing a box over
the glass to one of the regular cus
tomers. ’
One? day there approached a ruddy
cheeked young man who stepped
briskly and spoke In a deep voice.
“One of those, please,” he said,
pointing to the case, and Dolly
reached for the box. When he had
gone she sighed.
“That’s the way of It. When one
of those real men from the wide-open
spaces conies along, he does not stop
to talk. If he did he would not be
the kind I want and if he doesn't I
can never know him. Gracious, us
girls do have a perplexing time!”
Don Ramsey of the ruddy cheeks
came back. Always in businesslike
manner; lie purchased a cigar and
went his way with no more than a
“thank you’’ for the girl who began
to fashion romance from his appear
ance.
“Lie’s a big strong man,” she said,
“and not the kind to hang over a
counter for an hour at a time. But,
all the same he is smoking too many
cigars. I can’t see how any man can
use as many as he buys and still look
so well.”
And the big strong man was think
ing of Doily. The girl needed some
one to look after her, he decided. She
was too pretty and too intelligent to
be smirking and smiling at every
prospective customer. If he could get
acquainted, now, without her thinking
he was trying to he fresh, there might
be something he could do. Well, any
way, he could buy another cigar.
While Don made his purchase Dolly
scanned his face to see if there were
visible any of the effects of too much
smoking. Then she noticed that one
of the buttons on his coat was hang
ing on but two strands of thread.
The man needed someone who would
care for these things, someone to ad
vise him against reckless spending of
money and too much smoking.
There is the saying that opposites
attract. These two, opposite in every
thing except tne desire to he protec
tors, were hound in sympathies be
fore they had exchanged a single con
fidence.
“Of course,” said Dolly when at
last she braved the risk of offending
him. “It is none of my business, which
is selling this stock, but don’t you
think you are smoking too much?”
The man gazed at her soberly but,
once started, the girl plunged on.
“That button on your coat.” Sud
denly she felt she had gone too far.
Tills man was so different from the
rest.
“1 was going to say If you care to
bring the coat in tomorrow, any day,
I’ll fix it.”
Still the man stared at her. Then
witli difficulty he spoke as if to make
certain he had heard aright.
“You mean you have been worry
ing, or thinking, about me smoking
too much and about that button?”
She nodded, but now she was con
fused. .
“I gqtta get tin's right,” he con
tinued. “It’s important. You see I’ve
taken care of myself and idea of
someone sorta looking after me,” he
floundered then thrust out his hand.
‘Tut her there, girl; there’s two of
us. I’d —I’d like to take care of you,
too.”
Big Order
Customer —Do you make life-size
enlargements from photographs?
Photographer—Yes, sir; that’s one
of our special lines.
Customer —Well, do this one for me.
It's a snap I tooK of a whale. —Pear-
son’s Weekly.
The Why,of It
“We’ve been happily married for
years and my husband and I have nev
er disagreed.” j
“That’s nice to hear. However, my
husbund neyer*contradlcts me either.”
HIS UNSEEN SUCCESS
(By David Presley)
To the dark land of Africa
i A missionary went one day,
To teach those heathen people
To turn from idles away,
I And seek the blessed Savior,
I His peace and love and grace,
i But after a few days preaching
j They drove him from that place.
In searching for the missionary
They found that he was dead,
His lonely life was wasted
There many people said;
With a missionary woman as leader,
A revival swept that land,
And thirteen thousand converts
In Christian faith did stand.
They traced the woman conversion
Back to the lonely days,
When through the missionary plead
ing
She decided to change her way,
And turn from idle worship,
And with , the Christian go,
Tho’ the missionary was in Heaven —
When his work begin to grow.
When Christ, the Master, calls you
To work for Him today,
Do not be discouraged,
If only few will stay;
Tho’ you lead but one to Jesus,
Be faithful to the Lord,
That one may be a leader,
And bring you great reward.
The following news item was
clipped from the Gainesville News,
published June 24, 1902, thirty
years ago: Dr. M. M. Ham has pur
chased a locomobile, and he took
his first ride in it Thursday after
noon, going a distance of eight
miles. It is operated with a motor,
and gasoline is used for fuel, five
gallons running it about 50 miies.
The locomobile cost SBSO, and its
weight is about 750 pounds. It is
easy riding, and can run pretty fast.
The locomobile has attracted much
attenton since its arrival.”
NOTICE
A dividend has been declared,
payable to the depositors of the
Citizens Bank & Trust Company,
Jefferson, Georgia, in amount of
5%. The dividend checks may be
Obtained by calling on Mr. H. H.
Willis, Liquidating Agent, at the of
fice of the bank. The amount of the
dividend is $5,151.32, and payable
to all depositors who, have filed
claim and who’s claim has been al
lowed. This represents a total pay
ment of 100% to preferred claim
ants, and 12% to depositors. This
25th of June, 1932.
Citizens Bank & Trust Cos.,
By R. E. Gormley, Superintendent
of Banks.
\ —>
(alotabs
TRADE MARK RES.
For lazy liver, stomach and
kidneys, biliousness, indi
gestion, constipation, head
ache, colds and fever.
HV and 35 1 at dealers.
NOTICE
To Whom It May Concern: Mae
Coburn hereby gives notice according
.-to law that she has filed petition re
turnable to the August Term, 1932,
of the Superior Court, Jackson
County, which convenes on the first
Monday in August, next, to be re
lieved of her disabilities placed on
her by final divorce decree render-
ed on July 31, 1925, at Chambers,
in the Circuit Court of the 10th
Judicial Circuit, Polk County, State
of Florida, in case of Samuel G.
Coburn versus Mae Coburn. T his
30th day of May, 1932.
C. T. Storey, Jr.,
Clerk Superior Court,
Jackson County, Ga.
GENERAL INSURANCE
STOREY ELLINGTON, Agt.
Represent Standard Companies,
and write all lines, Fire, Tornado,
Life, Auto, Surety Bonds. Shall be
glad to serve you.
NOTICE
All parties indebted to the estate
of N. G. Troutt, deceased, are re
quested to settle same; and all par
ties holding claims against said
estate, are requested to present
them in due form for payment. This
July 1, 1932.
Hoke Troutt,
Mrs. E. A. Caldwell,
Executors Estate of N. G. Troutt.
Brief News Items
Levs Work For Mules In Hot
Weather Asked
Augusta, Ga.—A suggestion that
farmers lighten up on tho work of
mules and horses during the exces
sive hot weather is made by Bright
McConnell, Richmond county farm
agent.
He says: “At least 60 mules have
been reported dead in this section
from the intense heat during the
past two weeks. Farmers should
favor their animals during the tor
rid spell instead of working them
overtime.” A number of mulea
have suffered attacks of “blind stag
gers,” due to excess heat, he said.
He recommends that in very hot
weather horses and mules should
have wet snonges or light sunshades
on the head when at work.
* V
Jersey Couple Re-Wed After May
Divorces
Edgewater Park, N. J.—The Hin
ny Woodward Earls are married a
gain—to each other.
They were married first in Phila
delphia in 1916.
They were divorced in Tampa,
Fla,., in 1927.
Earl named his close friend,
Emil Reinbold, as co-respondent.
Then Earl marries Mrs. Reinbold
and Mrs. Earl married Reinbold.
A double divorce ended the al
liance in 1931.
The Earls were remarried in Elk
ton, Md., and the reunion was an
nounced yesterday.
Lightning Kills Trio At Biuffton
Savannah, Ga.—Two white men
and a negro were killed by lightning
which struck in a* field near Bluff
ton, S. C., Wednesday.
The dead are John Carroll, 18,
and Michael Cahill, 20, white
youths, and Nelson Brown, negro.
A man named Pope was severely
stunned by the bolt.
m * *
Two Men Are Killed Ey Lightning-
Bolt
Athens, Ga.—Two men were kill
ed and another severely burned
Tuesday afternoon when lightning
struck a barn in which seven sought
shelter from a heavy rain and thun
der cloud near Dunlay, in Ogle
thorppe County.
The dead are E. T. Tucker, 45,
and Curtis H. Clotfelter, 24, grad
uate of the Athens Business College,
and recent bookkeeper at Bruns
wick. J. T. Clotfelter, father of
young Clotfelter, was injured.
16 Mules Are Dead From Summer
Heat
Eatonton, Ga. Sixteen mules
died in Putnam County during the
past week from heat. Asa result
farmers are taking extra precau
tions in doing their plowing and
other farm work and allowing their
stock longer periods of rest. The
severe heat spell that has prevailed
for the past two weeks, has been
accompanied by almost daiiy show
ers and thunder storms.
+„ * *
How To Pronounce Roosevelt’*
Name
Albany, N. Y. —In case you aren’t
sure how the Democratic presiden
tial nominee pronounces his name,
here is the answer on authority that
couldn’t be higher. Franklin I>-
Roosevelt pronounces it “Rose-velt’
in two syllables and with a longf
“o.”
WHEN THE LAST PICTURE IS
PAINTED
“When Earth’s last picture is paint
ed, and the tubes are twisted and
dried,
When the oldest colors have faded,,
and the youngest critics have
died,
We shall rest, and, faith, we shall
need it—lie down for an aeon or
two.
Till the Master of All Good Work
men shall set us to work anew!
“And those that were good will be
happy: they shall sit in a golden
chair;
They shall splash at a ten-league
canvas with brushes of comet’s
hair;
They shall find real saints to draw
from—Magdalene, Peter and
Paul;
They shall work for an age at a
sitting and never be tired at all!
“And only the Master shall praise
us, and only the Master shall
blame;
And no one shall work for money,
and no one shall work for fame;
But each for the joy of the working,
and each, in his separate star,
Shall draw the Thing as he sees it
for the God of Things as Tney
Are!”
—Rudyard Kipling.