Newspaper Page Text
GA., may 25, 1933.
Round Trip Fares From Gainesville, Ga., To—
Washington, D. C. $11.70
Birmingham __ 4.40
Jacksonville - - 7.85
Richmond ....... 9.80
Proportionate Fares to Other Points
REDUCED PULLMAN FARES
Buy Railway and Pullman Tickets in Advance
Round Trip Fares to Northern and Eastern Cities
From Gainesville, Ga.
NEW YORK $19.90
DETROIT 20.90
ATLANTIC CITY 18.75
CHICAGO 20.95
E. E. Barry, Asst Gen. Passenger Agt., Atlanta
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
' lc A MILE RAIL FARES
between All Points In Southeast, Also Very Low Fares
To New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia an** Atlantic City
FARE APPLY EACH DIRECTION
Dates of Sale V * ‘ Return Limit
Maye 27-28-29 ' June 3
July 1-2-3 Jul y 8
August 4-5 August 12
Sept 1-2-3 Sept 9
October 6-7 October 14
November 28-29 December 7
Reduced Pullman Fares To All Points in Southeast
BAGGAGE CHECKED—STOPOVERS ALL POINTS
(Except North of Washington)
FOR INFORMATION CONSULT AGENT
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
TRUSTEES ELECTION
An election for Trustees for the sub-districts is order
to be held on Saturday, May 27, 1933, at the School
Building, in each School District in the county. The
k°urs for the election have been set at 1 o clock to 2
0 clock p. m. Let every school district where a vacancy
the Board of Trustees exisits, hold the election on this
day. ‘
Ry order of the Board of Education.
T. T. BENTON, C. S. S.
Bargain Round Trip Tickets
ONE CENT PER MILE
FOR EACH MILE TRAVELED
MAY 27TH - 28TH - 29TH
Final Return Limit June 3, 1933
Cincinnati $10.70
Memphis 9.50
Raleigh 7.65
Atlanta 1.10
PHILADELPHIA $16.65
CLEVELAND 20.75
BALTIMORE - 13.20
KANSAS CITY 24.20
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
BELIEVERS
There is no unbelief:
Whoever plants a seed beneath the
sod,
And waits to see it push away the
clod,
He trusts in God.
Whoever says, when clouds are in
the sky,
Be patient, heart, light breaketh by
and by,
Trusts the Most High.
Whoever sees ’neath winter’s field of
snow,
The silent harvest of the future grow,
God’s power must know.
The heart that looks on when the
eyelids close,
And dares to live his life in spite of
woes,
God’s comfort knows.
There is no unbelief:
And day by day, and night, uncon
sciously,
The heart lives by the faith the lips
deny;
God knoweth why.
—Tyndall.
CONVICTS TO BUILD
FOUR ADDITIONS TO
STATE’S HOSPITAL
The Georgia Prison Commission
has ordered all available skilled work
men in state prison camps sent to
Milledgeville on May 22 to begin
construction of four buildings to
house 300 additional patients at the
Milledgeville State Hospital, it was
disclosed at the Capitol Saturday.
The structures will be one-story af
fairs, to minimize fire hazard.
The commission has sent a letter to
all wardens of convict camps asking
for information as to the carpenters,
brick masons, plumbers, painters and
electricians on the various chain
gangs, and similar information is be
ing obtained at the state prison farms
in Baldwin and Tatnall Counties.
CALCIUM ARSENATE
Calcium Arsenate for sale.
See Farmers Warehouse.
MATERNITY MORTALITY
HIGHEST IN GEORGIA
Dr. Joe P. Bowdoin, assistant di
rector of the state department of
health, Wednesday said Georgia’s
maternity death rate was the highest
in the nation and asked the wives
of physicians attending the conven
tion of the Medical Association of
Georgia here to use their positions
to combat present conditions.
“Two mothers die in Georgia every
time the sun rises and sets,” the
physician said.
He also reported a 50 per cent in
crease in illegitimate births in the
state in the last 10 years end a “tre
mendous growth’’ of social diseases.
“Parents, particularly mothers and
especially you as wives of doctors
must take the responsibility of help
ing to solve these problems,’’ he said.
Our subscription list is corrected
to date. Look at the label on your
paper, and see if yours is paid. If
not, send in your renewal at once,
as we must comply with the postal
regulations and discontinue all sub
scriptions not paid in advance.
pep up ignjgijy
corn
Ai RO QuanuJltui
I CYAN AM ID
Give them a chance to make a Crop!
Cotton and Com that were not adequately fer
tilized at planting will begin to go backward
in mid-summer when they should be putting
on a crop.
Granular Aero Cyanamid will give your cotton
and corn new life, and will keep these crops
growing vigorously throughout the season.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SIDE-DRESSING
FOR CORN —Apply 75 pounds per acre, 6 inches to one side
of the row, when corn is about 10 inches high.
FOR COTTON —Apply 100 pounds per acre, 8 inches to one
tide of the row, after the cotton has been chopped out, when
the plants have 6 to 8 leaves.
FOR SALF BY
H. I. MOBLEY
Jefferson, Ga.
Cyanamid is NITROGEN plus LIME
HecticDa^-
TOO MUCH work, too much mental strain, too much worry
....then “NERVES”. How they torture you, tire you, keep
you awake nights!
“NERVES” make you irritable, restless; give you Headache, ;
Indigestion “NERVES” make you look and feel old weaken
resistance and pave the way for serious nervous or organic trouble.
J. M Foster a druggist, suffered tortures from Over-wrought
Nerves. He had dozens of so called “Nerve Remedies” in his
store. One by one he tried them without relief until But leb
Mr. Foster tell his experience in his own words
r<"'''
OLD RING FOUND IN TREE
Last year the storm blew down a
great oak tree in front of the Wood
all home. In cutting up this tree
an eighteen caret plain gold ring was
found embedded deep in the wood.
Inside the ring was the inscription:
“Birthday present;’’ nothing more.
It would be interesting to know
who gave tfns ring, to whom, and
when.
1 saw an old, old Bible that Mr.
Woodall inherited from his great
great-grandfather. In the record of
births that is in this book there is
this entry:
“Sarah Woodall, daughter of Wil
liam Woodall, and Anna, was bom
Feb. Bth day, 1797.’’
Do you suppose the ring was a
birthday gift to Sarah, say on Feb.
Bth, 1805? —G. A. Hall in the Car
tersville Tribune-News.
CALCIUM ARSENATE
Calcium Arsenate for sale.
See Farmers Warehouse.
“1 think Dr. Miles’ Nervine is the best nerve
medicine made, and that a better one cannot be
made. Dr. Miles’ Nervine was the only medi
cine on the shelf or in the prescription case that
put me on my feet.” J. M. Foster, Druggist
Marysville, Ohio
T DR. MILES’*
Nervine
JL 1 LIQUID
PAGE SEVEN
BRIEF NEWS ITEMS
Dahloncg Ga.—Johnny Summcr
our, of Dahlonega, on Friday after
noon picked up a gold nugget weigh
ing 81 pennyweights and 18 grains
and worth more than SIOO, while
placer mining near here. At the
same time a number of other gold
nuggets were found at the same spot.
This is the largest nugget found in
this section in almost a century.
—O—
Bible Distribution Decline* in Past
Year
New York.—Bibles and part of
Bibles distributed in this country and
abroad by the American Bible Socie
ty during 1932 totaled 8,067,156, the
society reported at its 117th annual
meeting today.
This number falls short of last
year’s by 1,678,200, and is smaller
than that of any year since 1925.
T. H. Davi* Nominated To U. S.
Attorneyship
Washington.—T. Hoyt Davis, of
Vienna, today was nominated Unit
ed States attorney for the middle
district of Georgia.
His selection was sent to the sen
ate by President Roosevelt for ap
proval. He would succeed Federal
Attorney Bootle.
Senator George, of Georgia, re
commended Davis. Georgia’s senior
senator lives at Vienna.
—O —
Cotton Consumption For April 470,-
685; Vs. 366,481 Last Year
Washington. Cotton consumed
during April was reported today by
the Census Bureau to have totaled
470,686 bales of lint and 54,731 of
linters, compared with 494,167 of
lint and 50,082 of linters in March
this year and 366,481 of lint and
52,173 of linters in April last year.
—O—
School 100 Years Old
Greensboro. —The White Plains
Junior High school will celebrate its
one hundredth anniversary May 26.
Dr. William Heard Kilpatrick, of
Columbia university, New York City,
and a native of White Plains, will de
liver the principal address. The
program will consist of talks by
former pupils who have gone out and
made a success in the various voca
tions of life.
—O—-
Methodist School To Go To
Thomasville
Nashville, Tenn. —The Board of
Missions of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, has decided to or
ganize a high school department at
Vashti school in Thomasville, Ga.,
and will open it at the beginning of
the fall term.
It decided further to close per
manently the Brevard Institute of
Brevard, N. C., at end of the summer
term and transfer such property and
equipment from Brevard to Vashti
as are needed by the Thomasville
school.
—O—
-101 Get Certificates From Young
Harris
Young Harris, Ga.—Young Harris.
College will on Monday give to 101
students junior college certificates.
This is the largest number ever to
receive diplomas at one time from
this institution.
— o —
Executive* To Meet
Sea Island Beach, Ga.—Cotton mill
executives from all parts of Georgia
will gather here at the Cloister hotel
on Thursday and Friday of this week
for the thirty-third annual conven
tion of the Cotton Manufacturers’
Association of Georgia. Final ar
rangements for a very interesting
and entertaining program have been
completed and an attendance of ap
proximately 150 is expected.
— o—
Win* Enough To Buy Hi*
Field Pea*
Athene, Ga.—John Middlebrooks
says he can now buy his field peas
without having to borrow the money.
Middlebrooks, a grizzled Clarke
County farmer, was awarded sweep
stakes prize in the annual flower
show here for his entry of foxglove.
“I’ve been wanting to buy some
field peas for some time,” he said
with a grin, “and now I can do it
without having to borrow the mon
ey.”
The sweepstakes prize was a $5
bill.
—O—
Crash Fatal To Wife Of Furman
President
Kings Mountain, N. C. —An auto
mobile wreck near here resulted in
the death of Mrs. W. J. McGlothlin
late today and the serious injury 0
three other persons, including
husband, Dr. W. J. McGlothhn, presi
dent of Furman University, a
vffle, S. C., and a former president
of the Southern Baptist convention.