Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
NOTTS FROM THE NATIONAL
CAPITOL
(By E. B. Betts)
Former Senator J. Thomas Heflin
of Alabama has been a prominent
visitor at the National Capitol the
past week. He served in the United
States Senate from Alabama, March
4, 1921, to January 3rd, 1931. He
was defeated on November 4, ID3O,
l>y lion. John H. Bankhead, of Jas
per County, Alabama. Senator Hef
lin is a fine man, and popular in
Democratic and Republican circles.
He was at the George Washington
Inn while here.
: x x
Hons. Thomas M. Bell of Gaines
ville, Hall County, Georgia, and John
B. Gamble, of the Classic City of
Georgia, were prominent visitors at
the National Capitol, March 14 and
15. Mr. Bell served 26 years in
Congress from the famous Ninth
District* of Georgia, from March 4,
1905, to January 3rd, 1931. Mr.
Gamble was Solicitor General of the
Western Ciicuit from January Ist,
1913, to January Ist, 1917. They
are bi th popular and fine men.
X X J
Hon. Hubert D. Stephen, former
Unit' and Stati Senator from Missis
sippi. who was defeated last Novcrm
bcr iu-n. T. G. Bilbo, was nomi
nated on Mar. 4 by President F. D.
Room'wit to be a member of the R.
F. ( . Corporation. His salary will
be $ lit, 000 a year when he is con
firms.l !j the United States Senate.
The President also appointed Hon.
Churii s T. Fisher to fill the vacancy
en the board caused by the death of
the Into Hon. J. J. Blaine, of Wis
consin. Mr. Fisher is from Michi
gan.
XXX
I was sorry, indeed, to read in the
North Georgia papers recently of the
death of Mrs. Wesley Peterson, of
Athens, Ga. She and Mr. Peterson
and family formerly lived in Attica
District, Jackson County, before
moving to Athens, Ga., a few years
ago. The family has my sympathy
in their bereavement.
Hon. Oliver W. Holmes, retired
Justice of the United States Supreme
Court, died at his home here March
sth, 1935. Had he lived until March
Bth, he would have been 94 years of
age. He was buried on March Bth,
with full military honors, in Arling
ton National Cemetery.
X X X
Miss Josephine L. Roche, of the
State of Colorado, Assistant Secre
tary of the U. S. Treasury, is the na
tion’s mo t prominent business wo
man. This is the verdict of a poll
conducted by the Bureau of Econo
mic Research of L. Bamberger and
Company, of Newark, N. J., to dis
cover the country’s 10 most promi
nent women in business.
AN EVENING OF ENTERTAIN
MENT FOR FARMERS
An evening of pleasant entertain
ment, a dart throwing contest for
farmers, und an opportunity to learn
some interesting things about one of
the South’s great industries, is of
fered free to farmers Friday night,
March 29th. The “party” will be
given at the Court House, Jefferson,
and the time is 8 p. m.
The chief feature of the evening
■will be a presentation of “Back to
the Soil.” This production gives a
lot of interesting information a
bnut nitrate of soda, and shows how
it is produced here in the South.
Only a few weeks ago Dr. Charles
11, Herty, the South’s great scientist,
urged Southern farmers to use
Southern fertilizers, and many farm
ers in this neighborhood are planning
to be at the showing in order to find
out all they can about this home
product.
All farmers are requested to be
on time, so they can participate ful
ly in the evening’s entertainment.
FEEL TIRED, ACHY
“ALL WORK OUT?”
Get Rid of Poisons That
Make You 111
TS a constant backache keeping
-■-you miserable? Do you suffer
burning, scanty or too frequent
urination: attacks of dizziness,
rheumatic pains, swollen feet and
ankles? Do you feel tired, nervous
—all unstrung?
Then give sonic thought to your
kidneys. Be sure they function
properly, for functional kidney dis
order permits poisons to stay in
the blood and upset the whole sys
tem.
Use Doan’s Pills. Doan's are for
the kidneys only. They help the
' kidneys cleanse the blood of health
destroying poisonous waste. Doan's
Pills are used and recommended
the world over. Get them from any
<truggist.
BCiS’S FEUS
Airplanes provided by the United
States coast guard are being used to
“spot" hidJcn whisky stills in the
swamps of ; o-th Georgia, it was re
vealed Friday by R. E. Tuttle, dis
trict supervisor of the alcohol tax
unit, in announcing that 3.319 gal
lons of corn whisky were seized by
his agents in Georgia during the first
four days of this week. Tuttle said
that the coast guard is co-operating
in south Georgia by placing amphi
bian planes at the disposal of the al
cohol tax units. These planes are
flown over a wide territory extend
ing 50 miles inland, and resulted in
the discovery of several of the stills
raided during the week.
IT WONT EE LONG NOW
A girl must be versatile about a
big circus, must be talented in a
dozen different spheres and it may
be said of pretty Mary Ellen, to be
seen with the Kay Bros. Circus on
Saturday, March 30, that no femi
nine member of that organization
displays her diverse entertainng
gifts over a wider or more varied
field than does she. Miss Mary El
len, a miss not towering much over
five feet and with a wealth of blonde
hair, framing a piquant little face,
with every outward indicaton that
she would run and scream at the
MiCQVERED
A BETTER KIND OF
FERTILIZER!
v FERTILIZERS have added
* millions of dollars to crop
Sggr f 5 values every year by increas
in £ yields and improving
Quality. Yet, because most
—fertilizers left acid residues
in the soil, crops could not
12,3 make maximum use of the
f plant food in the fertilizer.
Improved Red Steer Non
jSkM Acid Forming Fertilizer
||P j Ji'WC (physiologically neutral)
?? I does not leave harmful acid
Afl 111 W residues. Plants can use
every ounce of the plant food
- n g row j n g to an early, big
yielding maturity. Besides being made Non-
Acid forming this year, Red Steer now contains
new plus values—added calcium, magnesium
and other important plant foods that improve
yields and quality. Investigate this improved
Swift Product.
Shift's Bed Steer Fertilizers
jp ORM INGr
Physiologically Neutral
with added calcium and magnesium
J. L. BAILEY, Jefferson.
Braselton Improvement Cos., Braselton.
fit. T. MASSEY, Commerce.
A. J. MURPHY, Talmo.
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
Ten public librarians from around
the country put their cards together
to determine what books were in
most demand during the year. Here
is the result of this literary populari
ty contest: "Anthony Adverse,” by
Allen; "One Hundred Million Guinea
Pigs,” by Hallett; “Goodbye, Mr.
Chip3,” by Hilton; "Life Begins at
Forty,”'by Pitkin; "Testament of
Youth,” by Brittain; “So Red the
Rose,” by Young; "While Rome
Burns,” by Woollcott; “I Went to
Pit College,” by Gilfillan; “Nijin
sky,” by Nijinsky; “Economy of
Abundance," by Chase. Strange to
say, only three of these books are
novels, which shows that people are
reading wholesome literature.
first sound of a terrible mouse, en
ters the Kay Bros, arena with a herd
of mammoth elephants and sets
them through their paces as easily
as she would a bevy of fluffy kit
tens at home. At other intervals in
the program Miss Mary Ellen dances
on the tight wire high in the air and
mounts the slender swinging ladder,
and after passing through this rou
tine twice daily, Miss Mary Ellen
has all the rest of the time to her
self. Versatility is Mary Ellen’s
other name.
LY'-', —— ' — *yc- r '■*•*/* 1 .„|
O' X Ojmr
/ VOOfe N\OTHER \ fci®* JX/X/
/ DISTINCTLY TOLD YOO, X • * K
i / WHEN TOO WENT OOT A PF==l =
V THAT YOO WERE NOT I mfn
\to play baseball . / wm//
.... ...... >'' .. j
ADVERTISING IS URGED AS AID TO
RECOVERY
/
O
St. Louis, Mo. —Business is showing a steady up
ward trend, and the intelligent use of advertising will
accelerate the return of prosperity, C. C. Younggreen
past president of the Advertising Federation of America
and of the International Advertising Association, said in
an address to the Sales Managers’ Bureau of the Chamber
of Commerce at its weekly luncheon at Hotel Jefferson
this week.
“Newspapers,” he said, “are the most effective of
all advertising media, because they are closer to the
public than any other. Most sales are made by advertis
ing long before the salesman has succeeded in getting the
customer’s signature on the dotted line.”
COMMON CAUSE Of
BALDNESS
One of the chief cause* of premature Jray
ness. falling hair and ultimate baldness is
lack of circulation in the scalp.
To overcome this and bring an abundant
supply of blood to nourish the hair roots,
massage scalp at night with Japanese 1 *
the antiseptic counter irritant.
Thousands of men and women report atnar.
im: results in stopping falling hair, grow
ing new hair on bald areas and in eliminat
ing dandruff and itching scalp.
Japanese Oil costs hut 60c at any j}rug
gist. Kconomv sire, $1 FRhK Tne Iru h
About the llair." Write Dept. 36.
NATIONAL REMEDY CO.
50 West 45th Street, New fork
FOR SALE—Several good fresh
in milch cows.—R. C. Roberts.
DAYS WE’LL NEVER FORGET
Porterhouse steak and bacon will
be “company” dishes before 1935
ends, if predictions of Secretary of
Agriculture Henry A. Wallace come
true. He foresees a32 per cent in
crease in meat prices by 1936. But
ter and eggs will go up 6 per cent,
but vegetables will cost about the
same, he said, and food prices gen
erally will increase about 11 per
cent during the first six months of
1935.
FOR SALE —Fine lot of nice bright
Hay, in any quantity.—R. C. Rob
erts.
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1935.
DEAF? SSK 1051
Dr. Edward Kolar, M.D., said: “Ourlne
helped cases T had given up as hopeless
A truly remarkable scientific remedy."
No matter how severe your deafness or
head noises are, e fiw drops of Ourine in
each ear is guaranteed to help you.
R. P. Maxwell, Deputy Sheriff,’ says
“ Have just finished my first bottle; glad to
state I can now hear my watch tick Tcday
was the first time I heard the church beU
ring In two years.”—Stop worrying; use
Ourlne. 500.000 people have enjoyed prompt
rei.ef At all leading druggists. Prepared by
AURINE REMEDY COMPANY
3635 W. Cermak Rd., Chicaflo, 111.
When it is not in use, cover your
ironing board with a slip cover, made
of gingham or muslin, to keep the
board covering clean.