Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
PITTMAN WIN
IN LANDSLIDE
Tki. 1. View Of Bayne of Macon
Evening News. *
(From Savannah Press)
Since Judge Claude C. Pittman of
Cartersville, opposition candidate to
Gov. Talmadge in the gubernatorial
race, has started his speaking cam
paign the sentiment of the people of
Georgia has changed, said Charles
J. Bayne, editor of the Macon Eve
ning News, and "I can’t imagine
anything Mr. Talmadge can say. that
would counteract the documentary
evidence of Judge Pittman," the vis
iting editor stated.
The people must have necessarily
had a candidate to oppose Talmadge
before they could have anybody to
turn to and take them away from
Talmadge, said Mr. Bayne. This
Judge Pittman is doing, he declared,
and he predicted the coming pri
mary would be one of the greatest
political upsets in the history of
Georgia.
Mr. Bayne said for thirty-five
years as a newspaper man in Wash
ington and in Georgia he had been
following politics, and never in his
experience has he been so convinced
as he was now of the outcome of the
Georgia governor race, he said.
Some of the salient points in favor
of Pittman he enumerated as fol
lows : •
"Every straw vote I hear of favors
Pittman.”
"Fulton county, in fact every
county in North Georgia, will go for
Pittman. Talmadge’s only strength is
in South Georgia, and he is fast
losing this."
"1 was told that only two dele
gates at the annual convention of
the Georgia Bar Association at Sea
Island favored Talmadge. The rest
were all for Pittman.”
"Butts county, bearing the tradi
tion as does Maine for the entire
country, that ‘as Butts goes, so goes
the state,’ has already indicated in
a sword-crossing of Talmadge and
anti-Talmadge candidates that it is
almost three to one for Pittman.”
“I hear that Baldwin county will
go three to one for Pittman.”
CLIPPINGS FROM COMMERCE
NEWS
Suspected Killer Of Local Negro
Arretted
Albert Mintz, Commerce Negro
wanted for the murder of Cotton
Mayfield, another Negro, was ar
rested on a minor offense in Mari
etta Sunday, Jtlne 17, and identi
fied by letters in his pocket, accord
ing to Chief of Police J.’ H. Hix.
The Marietta police notified Com
merce, and Deputy Sheriff Fred Cul
berson went to Marietta Monday
and brought Mintz back to the coun
ty jail in Jefferson where he is be
ing held for a Grand Jury investi
gaton this August.
Mintz is held on suspicion of hav
ing been the murderer of Cotton
Mayfield who was shot while attend
ing a church supper near Commerce,
June 9. The Coroner’s jury return
ed a verdict of death caused from
pistol shots at the hands of an un
known person, but Mintz was su
spected because he disappeared im
mediately after the shooting took
place.
The Marietta police found letters
in his pocket which indicated that
he lived in Commerce, and notified
the Commerce police to find out if
he was wanted for anything here.
Officer Hix returned word that the
Negro was wanted on suspicion of
murder.
"What Price Beating?” Ak Irate
Negrete
• As Officer Tom Lord made his re
gular patrol of the town Sunday af
ternoon he was accosted by an irate
Negro woman. ,
“Whitefolks,” she asked, “You is
a policeman, isn’t you?”
Officer Lord admitted that he was.
“Well I just wanted to ask you
how much it will cost me to beat up
another woman,” she queried.
Somewhat taken back Officer Lord
surmised that would cost her any
where from $2.50 on up. “It' all
depends on how badly you beat her
up,” he said.
“Well, I caught her with my hus
band this morning,” she said. "And
I wanted to know how much it was
going to cost me before I goes down
and whups her. So you can just
come on down and lock me up in a
little while 'cause I’se going down
to whup her now. But don’t keep
me in the lock-up over night, ‘cause
Ise got to get breakfast for my
whitefolks in the morning.”
COUNTY AGENT’S
COLUMN
"Bankhead Cotton Marketing Act”
Under the Bankhead Act it is
necessary’ that all bales of cotton
ginned before June 1, 1934, be tag
ged with an identification tag so that
when this cotton is placed on the
market this identification tag will
exempt It from any tax.
If you have have any cotton on
hand, advise me in writing at once
the number of bales and where the
cotton is located. If your cotton is
in one of the public, warehouses of
Jackson county you need not advise
me, because the warehousemen have
already made application for identi
fication tags to be placed pn your
cotton.
There is not any expense to owner
of cotton for having identification
tags attached to same. The owner
makes application for the tags to
me, and we will have the special tag
man come to place where cotton is
stored and attach tags to each bale.
Timely Suggestions
.1934-34 Cotton Acreage Reduc
tion Contract^: Checks for first part
of rental for most farmer* in Jack
son county have been received, and
these farmers will be advised by let
ter when to come for checks.
Grazing Cattle: All farmers who
have a good size acreage of well
grassed land already fenced or not
fenced, and would like to lease for
use in grazing cattle for remainder
of this season, are asked to advise
me in writing at once and give de
tails about grazing lands.
Identification Cotton Bale Tags:
All farmers who have old cotton
and not stored in public warehouse
are urged to make request to me at
once for identification tags to be
placed on cotton, so as to be exempt
from tax when sold.
Cotton 801 l Weevil: Pre-square or
early poisoning with the use of
calcium arsenate as dust or liquid
mixture is the most economical and
effective boll weevil control method.
Cotton should have already been
poisoned once or twice, and should
be poisoned this, the 18th, and next
week, the 25, and if any signs of
weevil, again the following week.
Pick up from ground and off of
plants all affected cotton squares
for the next three weeks, June 25,
July 2 and 9. Apply all additional
fertilizer expect to put on cotton
this week.' Cultivate cotton at least
once each week.
Yours for service,
W. HILL HOSCH,
County Agricultural Agent.
STRANGE. BAFFLING BLOOD
DISEASE IS REPORTED
SOLVED AT EMORY U.
The strange case of the disappear
ing white corpuscles, a condition
that means almost certain death,
was announced solved by Emory
University scientists Wednesday.
Baffled for 10 years by agranu
locytosis, a bloodstream malady from
which few recover, the Emory de
partment of pathology, headed by
Dr. R. R. Kracke, has found the
condition is caused by the taking of
certain pain-killing or fat-reducing
drugs.
There is still nc known curb,only
the physician knows how to prevent
it if the patient will refrain from
use of the drugs.
Dr. Kracke said the drugs, chief
ly amidopyrine and its compounds
widely prescribed by physicians for
the relief of pain, and dinitnaphenol,
used in recent years for “reducing,”
attack the bone inarrow where the
body has established factories for
the manufacture of white corpuscles.
The drugs do not affect the white
corpuscles already in the blood
stream but damage or destroy the
cells that manufacture the corpus
cles, gradually, if the supply in the
blood dies, causing in a complete
absense of the white corpuscle in
the blood. The result is death.
In this country there are 105
plants manufacturing dog-food.
These plants employ over 2,000 peo
ple, producing what is supposed to
be a balanced diet for dogs; the sales
average, which appears to be almost
incredable is over $100,000,000 an
nually. This food is put in shiny
tabled cans and packed with the ut
most care. Every ounce of food is
required to pass the pure food law
and be free from germs and free
from what might develop sickness.
Not many of,us can visualize a dog
being fed out of cans y that are put
up and labeled so attractively. We
usually think of the dog’s food as
any old bone of refuse from the
kitchen scraps.
THE JACKSON HERALD. JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
The LOW PRICE
of the FORD
GOES STILL LOWER!
Ford V-8 prices were not raised this year. Now
they have been lowered . The Ford V-8 was a
great value at the first of the year. It is still a
112-inch wheelbase car —and the new low
price makes it a greater value than ever.
The Ford V*B offers you the only V-8 engine
in a car selling for less than $2500. It offers
you the Torque Tube Drive . . . welded steel
spoke wheels ... an all-steel body . . . alum
inum cylinder head . . . and free action for
all four wheels with the safety of strong axle
construction. It is decidedly “The Car With
out A Price Class.”
Inspect the Ford V-8. Look at higher-priced
'cars. The more of them you look at . • . the
more Ford V-8 features you will see. Drive
the Ford V-8. And while you thrill to its V-8
performance . . . remember that it is the mpst
NOW
’sos*""
F.0.8. DETROIT
31 iJ F "j Do they torture you by day?
ifiiiT¥iKeep you awake at night?
I What is it that keeps hospitals open and doctors
I busy? NERVES.
I What is it that makes your face wrinkled and
I makes you feel old? NERVES
I Nine times out of ten it’s NERVES that make you
I restless, worried, haggard.
1 Blue-give you Nervous Indi
gestion, Nervous Headache?
I When nerves are over-taxed, you worry over
I trifles, find it hard to concentrate, can’t sit still,
I Nerve Strain brings on Headache. N
I Nervous people often suffer from Indigestion.
I There may be absolutely nothing wrong with the
I organs of digestion, but the Nerves are not on the
I job to make the organs do their work properly.
Do they interfere with your
B k. —r-Mr work; ruin your pleasure; drive
way your friends?
You’re cheating yourself and the man who pays
you if you work when your NERVES are not
normal.
You can’t have a good time when you are nervous.
You can’t make or keep friends when you are
keyed up and irritable. You may excuse your-
ALL passenger car models have
85 horsepower V-8 engines
and 112-inch WHEELBASE
economical car to operate that Ford has ever
built !
Ford V-8 Trucks and commercial cars
have also been reduced in price. More
than ever before Ford offers you
“America’s Great Truck Value.”
AUTHORIZED SOUTHEASTERN FORD DEALERS
FORD V 8
Easy terms through the Universal Credit Company—
the Authorized Ford Finance Plan
Travel anywhere ♦ ♦ ♦ any day
“"“SOUTHERN
for fj-
// per mile
' Save by using the Southern at th*
Mg' -p lowest fares ever offered t
if P > lie per mile —in Coaches
if * One way tickets—sold dally
to any point on th Southern
I J 'lf HI 2 C
if sleeping and parlor ears
it r—f 1 Return limit U day*
r sleeping and parlor cars
, 'tjO" / Return limit JO day* ■
i C per mile one way in
UUjL;lftlP* sleeping and parlor cats *
- ' N O SURCHARGE]
Your trip on the Southern will b
quicker, safer—and more econotnl
call No tires to change; no truck* t#
dodge; none of tha hazard*, bother
PRAffl L JENKINS nd pens# of driving your own ear.
I Trait tc comfortable in the safety
VA will hi of train traK'oL
WASHINGTON,. C
• +
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
E. E. BARRY, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
Georgia, Jackson County. Where
as, Green Braselton, administrator
of Mrs. M. C. Baird, represents to
the court in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has
fully administered Mrs. M. C.
Baird’s estate; This is, therefore, to
cite all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause, if any
they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his
administration, and receive letters
of dismission on the first Monday in
July, 1934. This June 4th, 1934.
W. W. DICKSON, Ordinary.
THURSDAY, JUNE
YEAR’S SUPPORT
To
Georgia, Jackson County. ... \
Whom It May Concern: Noti
hereby given, that the appraise |
pointed to set apart and
year’s support to Mrs. J- C. “ e a
the widow of Dr. J. C. Benne
ceased, have filed their a " ar ' e i
unless good and sufficient c*
shown, the same will be m ? joU
judgment of the court at tn
term, 1934, of the Court ot u
nary. This June 4th, 1934.
W. W. DICKSON, Ordio*^