Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1935.
We Have It
CAL-NITRO
19.45% AMMONIA AND 50% LIMESTONE
That GOOD NITRATE
That CONTAINS LIME
Side-Dress Your Cotton and Corn with
CAL-NITRO
Quick in Action
Lasting in Effect
COME IN AND GET IT FROM
Farmers Warehouse, Jefferson.
J. L. Bailey, Jefferson.
Commerce Fertilizer Cos., Commerce.
Talmo Warehouse Cos., Talmo.
FULL WEEK - LOW FARES
ALL EXPENSE VACATION TOURS TO
NEW YORK AND WASHINGTON
FROM ATLANTA SATURDAYS
JUNE 15— JULY 13—AUGUST 17
TOUR INCLUDES: Railroad and Pullman Tickets, Ho
tel Room with Private Bath, Sightseeing Trips in abun
dance at Washington and New York. Transfers be
tween Stations and Hotels.
2 DAYS IN WASHINGTON—4 DAYS IN NEW YORK
Covering all important points in both cities, including a
delightful trip up Hudson River to West Point Military
Academy.
Leave Atlanta, 6:05 P. M., C. S. TANARUS., Saturday.
Arrive Atlanta, 3:15 P. M,, C. S. TANARUS., Sunday.
For full Information and Circular write THOMPSON
TOURS, 301 Volunteer Building, Atlanta, Ga., or
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE
Georgia, Jackson County. By vir
tue of an order from the Court of
Ordinary of Jackson County, Geor
gia, there will be sold, at public out
cry, on the first Tuesday in June,
1935, before the court house door,
iji Jefferson, Jackson County, be
tween the legal hours of sale, the
following described property, to-wit:
A one-fourth undivided interest in
and to a certain tract of land, lying
and being in the 1727th District, G.
M., Jackson County, Georgia, con
taining 41.95 acres, more or less,
and being known and designated as
Lot Number Two of the plat made
by C. B. Chandler, and dated April
3, 1925, and being more particular
lv described by metes and bounds, as
follows: Beginning at a persimmon
at the intersection of the Athens
and Jefferson road and the Tallassee
Bridge road, and running thence
along the Tallassee road south 19.50
chains to stake, thence north 77 A
degrees west 17.22 chains to dog
wood, thence north 44% degrees
west 8.40 chains to poplar, thence
north 39 degrees E. 17.00 chains to
rock, thence north 40% degrees east
3.15 chains to road, thence along
road south 65 east 9.17 chains,
thence along road south 69 west
8.56 chains to persimmon, the be
ginning corner.
Said property to be sold as the
property of the estate of H. N.
ShacKelford, late of said county, de
ceased, and terms of said sale to be
cash. This' the 6th day of May,
J93 °' G. O. Shackelford,
Administrator Estate of H. N.
Shackelford.
£££ MALARIA
ODD cVlds
Liquid - Tablet* first day.
Salve - Nose Tonic and Laxative
Drops
HOUSE APPROVES BILL
FOR MORTGAGE RELIEF
Washington.—The house Monday
adopted the conference report on
the bill providing an additional sl,-
750,000,000 for home mortgage re
lief through the Home Owners’ Loan
Corporation. The report was sent to
the senate for final action.
The house accepted the senate
amendment providing new loan ap
plications can be received by the
HOLC for 30 days after enactment
of the measure.
Conyers Girl Killed In Fall Off
Horse
Athens, Ga. —Miss Renee Eloise
Cannon, 18, of Conyers, was killed
late today when she fell from a
horse.
Miss Cannon was returning from
a riding class on the University of
Georgia campus, when several horses
bolted. She was thrown and her
neck broken.
She was a sophomore in the Uni
versity and the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. R. Cannon, of Conyers.
About 25 students participated in
the riding class and about half dozen
of the horses became frightened as
the class returned to the stables.
n r 1 CO don’t lose
Ut Am HOPE! . . .
Dr Edward Kolar. M.D., said: "Ourlne
helped cases I had given up as hopeless.
A truly remarkable scientific remedy.”
No matter how severe your deafness or
head noises are, ft *rw drops of Ourlne 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. Today
was the first time I heard the church bell
ring in two years.”— Stop worrying; use
Ourlne. 500.000 people have enjoyed prompt
relief At all leading druggists. Prepared by
AURINE REMEDY COMPANY
3635 W. Cermak Rd. t Chicago, 111.
THE JACKSON HERALD. JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
NOTICE OF BOND ELECTION
State of Georgia, County of Jack
son. To the Qualified Voters of
Consolidated District, No. 4, Jackson
County, Georgia: Notice is hereby
given that on the 18th day of June,
1935, an election will be held in and
for said Consolidated District, No.
4, of said County of Jackson, for the
purpose of the termination of the
question whether bonds shall be is
sued by said District in the aggre
gate sum of Fifty-Five Hundred
($5500.00) Dollars, for the purpose
of erecting and equipping a school
house in said District, said bonds to
bear date of July 1, 1935, and bear
interest at the rate of six (6 c /c) per
cent, per annum, payable annually;
however, the first payment of in
terest being six (6) months, and
payable January 1, 1936, and on
each first day of January thereafter
till all the principal and interest o 1
said bonds are paid in full. The prin
cipal of said bonds are to be paid as
follows: A Five Hundred ($600.00)
Bond on January 1, 1938, and a bond
of five hundred ($500.00) on each
alternate year thereafter on the said
first of January until the last bond
becomes due on January 1, 1958.
For the purpose of retiring the
above bends and interest thereon, a
sinking fund shall be created by a
tax levy upon all the taxable proper
ty in said District sufficient to raise
a sum that will meet the payments
of the above bonds and interest e
numerated; said levy to be made
first for the year 1935, and each
year thereafter until the year 1958,
inclusive.
The principal and interest of said
bonds to be payable in lawful money
of the United States of America at
some financial office of some institu
tion in the City of Atlanta, State of
Georgia, or in the City of New York,
State of New York.
Polls will be opened at 8:30
o’clock, Eastern Standard Time, a.
m., and close at 3:00 o’clock, Eastern
Standard Time, p. m., at A. O. Pitt
man’s Store. Said election to be
held on the 18th day of June, 1935.
Those desiring to vote in favor of
the issue of said bonds, will do so by
casting their ballot, having written
or printed upon them the words,
“For Bonds.” Those desiring to
vote against the issue of said bonds,
will do so by casting their ballot,
having written or printed upon them
the words, “Against Bonds.”
It is further ordered, for the pur
pose of paying the above items of
indebtedness, the County Commis
sioners for the County of Jackson
are authorized and directed to levy
annually a sufficient tax upon all of
the property within the limits of
said District, and order the same to
be collected in terms of the law to
meet each of the above items.
D. P. Bolton,
M. J. Dixon,
O. B. Hawks,
Trustees Consolidated District, No.
4, Jackson County, Georgia.
Geo. W. Westmoreland,
Attorney for Trustees.
Georgia, Jackson County. I, M.
J. Dixon, do certify that the above
is a true and correct copy of notice
calling election as is of file in Minu
tes of Board of Trustees. It is fur
ther certified said notice is based on
petition signed by one-fourth the
qualified voters petitioning the Trus
tees of said District to call the elec
tion and an order of Trustees calling
the election. All of which is of file
in Minutes of Board of Trustees.
This May 17th, 1935.
M. J. Dixon,
Secretary Board of Trustees, Con
solidated District, No. 4.
Sheathing paper is used on side
walls in house building to keep out
wind and dampness.
BAKING
|\V-> POWDER.
_
Manufactured by baking
powder Specialists who
make nothing but bak
ing powder under
supervision of expert
chemists.
ALWAYS-— a magm
Same price today
as 44 years ago
25 ounces for 256
FULL PACK
NO SLACK FILLING
MILLIONS OF POUNDS HAVE BEEN
USfD gr OU GOVERNMENT
JUST DOESN’T KNOW
(From Macon County Citizen)
Well, Talmadge made his Wash
ington radio speech, "Wake Up A
merica." The first thing we want to
know is who paid for the radio fa
cilities. We could interpret the
speech better if we knew the answer
to that to begin with.
While he was attacking President
Roosevelt, we could not help but
compare the shallow, frothing, foam
ing waves to the profound, unfath
omed depths of ocean.
It is quite evident that the gover
nor has deserted the ship, if in fact
he really knows what he is doing.
He asks for unrestricted liberty of
business a.nd enterprise. Every
student knows that the more liberty
we have the less equality we have.
Our task is and has been to hue as
closely as possible to a middle course.
The Democratic party has preferred
to give equality the edge. The Re
publicans have favored liberty.
Hamilton urged more liberty, Jef
ferson more equality.
Going back to the old order means
child labor, long hours, sweat shops,
cheap wages, cheap crops, overpro
duction and a re-enactment of the
drama of starvation and plenty, the
subservience of the weak to the
powerful and the limitation of op
portunity for the poorer and middle
classes.
The trouble with Mr. Talmadge is
that he doesn’t know what the whole
thing is about. He and his chislers
are so busy feathering their nests
that they haven’t had time to dig
down and learn what the name of
the play is. All they can do is
heckle the actors when they don’t
comprehend the scene.
And the Democratic party won’t
suicide by selecting such a man as
its leader in 1936 or any other year.
Any man who will hire a lawyer and
agree to pay him $500.00 cash, and
give him instead a void county war
rant isn’t quite big enough to be
presidential timber.
We are ashamed for our state.
We bow our head in shame. The
people of Georgia made a great mis
take, but even if they did they do
not deserve the feeling of disgrace
and chagrin which they are having
to suffer now. Thank God they will
rise to the occasion and redeem
themselves at the first opportunity as
they are doing over every county in
the entire state with every passing
day.
In the meantime the governor is
asked the question: Governor, if it
was Talmadge AND Roosevelt when
you were running for governor last
fall, why is it Talmadge against
Roosevelt now? You either lied to
us or you have, changed your mind.
If you have changed your mind since,
why? What reasons have come in
to being since the election which
were not present before?
Governor Talmadge will be mor
at home now amonfc the Republicans
and manufacturers of the North and
East than he is among the cotton
farmers of Ge’orgia and the South.
Jackson Progress-Argus.
The use of the MaVket Bulletin,
an official publication of the state
government issued by the Depart
ment of Agriculture, for any other
purpose than that contemplated b>
the general assembly in making the
appropriation for its support, is a
subversion of authority that should
be, and is, resented by the state and
especially by the farmers in whose
interest it is supposed to be publish
ed.—Atlanta Constitution.
With the possible exception of
Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roose
velt has been the nation’s greatest
president. His name and achieve
ments will illuminate the pages of
history hundreds of years to come.
That he has made mistakes merely
tends to prove that he has striven
to accomplish something worth while.
“It is human to err, but it is divine
to forgive.”—Jack Patterson in the
Griffin Register.
General Insurance,
Jefferson Insurance Agency,
Jefferson, Georgia.
IpTV/4 Helping Hand,
Y Constipation
Sufferers
Dr. Hitchcock’s
Laxative powder
“NATURES BEST ASSISTANT
BRIEF NEWS ITEMS
Oklahoma To Make Whisky From
Popcorn
Okmulgee, Okla.—The boya who
used to buy popcorn by the sack can
now get it by the gallon.
Charles E. Douglas, of Okmulgee,
disclosed Friday he had contracted
with distilleries at Springdale and
Fort Smith, Ark., for 150,000 gal
lons of whisky to be made from pop
corn which he will furnish.
X t X
450-Pound Wifo Seeks Annulment
From Midget
New York.—A joke’s a joke, but
now Mrs. Mildred Glickcns, who
weighs 450 pounds, is tired of her
marriage to Jack Glickens, three
foot midget, and today sought an
annulment.
She thought all the time that the
ceremony last Christmas Eve was a
“mock marriage,” for publicity pur
poses only, Mrs. Glickens alleged # in
her complaint.
'X X X
1,500,000 Trees Grown At Athens
Athens, Ga.—Trees, approximate
ly 1,500,000 of them, are being
grown on the University College of
Agriculture department nursery this
year to be used in reforesting Geor
gia lands.
Trees grown this year include
slash pine, loblolly pine, long leaf
pine and black locust.
X X X
Highest Paid Woman Draws $44,266
Yearly
Washington. The highest-paid
business woman in America, accord
ing to statements filed thus far with
the Securities and Exchange Com
mission, is Mary Lewis Finley, vice
president of Best & Cos., New York
department store.
She was listed for an annual sal
ary of $44,266.
Next highest woman’s so
far reported was $25,228 to Miss
Sarah M. Sheridan, vice president
of the Detroit Edison Cos.
XXX
Ty Ty Live* Up To Name; Beer
Vote Wa* 40 To 40
Ty Ty, Ga.—There must be some
thing in a name. On the beer issue
in Wednesday’s election, official re
turns show that Ty Ty district re
corded a tie vote —40 to 40.
Ty Ty is a town of 450 inhabi
tants situated on the Atlantic Coast
Line railroad west of Tifton and is
near the Tift and Worth county
lines.
t t X
AH But One of Quint* Now Have
Two Teeth
Callander. Ont.—With 10 days re
maining before they celebrate their
first birthday, each of the Dionne
quintuplets boasted of two teeth to
day with the exception of Marie.
Secile cut her second tooth yes
terday.
Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe reported no
imminent sign of a second tooth for
Marie, but it is expected' she will
produce the “molar” before May
28, date of the first birthday party.
Watermelon .Crop Will Move June 8
Perry, Ga., May 20.—The Georgia
watermelon crop is expected to be
gin moving about June 8. Fifty
thousand acres are said to have been
planted in this state. Houston
County’s acreage in melons has been
increased 16 per cent this year and
it is estimated that 350 cars will be
shipped during July and August.
Shipments of peaches from Hous
ton County will not begin until June
10, as the early , varieties are not
grown here.
Couple Weds on Hoarded Pennies,
Gives Judge One
St. Clairsville, Ohio.—A Shady
side, Ohio, couple who saved their
pennies to get married, gave Pro
bate Judge Harry Albright a 1-cent
profit.
“We want a marriage license,”
said the bridegroom, handing the
judge a bag of pennies.
Judge Albright counted 301 cop
pers. A license cost $3.
“Oh, well, we were excited and
miscounted. That’s your profit and
our loss; keep it,” waved the bride
groom.
t t 1
Three New CCC Site* In Georgia
Announced
Villa Rica, Cartersville and Bu
ford have been selected as sites for
Civilian Conservation Corps camps
to carry on soil erosion work in
Georgia, it was announced yester
day by fourth corps headquarters.
This state will have nine new
camps and one re-established camp
under the expanded soil erosion pro
gram. Musella, Lumpkin and Buena
Vista have already been selected as
camp sites, leaving three more to be
announced.
PAGE SEVEN
BRIEF NEWS ITEMS
Peach Grower* Apply Du*t With
Airplane*
Fort Valley, Ga.—Dusting young
peaches by use of an airplane is be
ing tried out here by leading grow
ers who say the experiment is satis
factory. They point to the result
ant uniform distribution, explaining
that it takes less dust when applied
from planes.
Large shipments soon will begin
moving from here, according to
growers.
I X X
Many Moonhiner* Wcr* Arrested
During April
Atlanta.—Two hundred and thir
ty-nine persons were arrested for
making liquor and 102 stills were
seized in Georgia during April, the
federal alcohol tax unit reports. This
figure compared with 179 arrests in
January, 189 in February and 321
in March, R. E. Tuttle, district sup
ervisor, said.
X X X
Corset And Beer
Cleveland. —Sleep in a tightly
laced corset. Drink lots of beer.
Sip water through linen held over
a glass. These were only a few of
the scores of remedies for hiccoughs
telephoned to Miss Lillian Mosko
witz, when she hiccoughed for near
ly three weeks straight.
X X t
Athens Beer Dealer* Warned By
Solicitor
Athens, Ga.—Beer dealers whose
establishments are located within
100 yards of school premises here
were notified today by Solicitor
General Henry H. West to discon
tinue sales or prosecutions will fol
low.
His order, Solicitor West said, is
in compliance with the amendment
to the beer bill which prohibits its
sale within 100 yards of an educa
tional institution. Several cafes and
other places now selling beer here
are affected by the order, it is said.
X t t
Big Iri*h Potato Yield Reported By
Georgian
Sandeisville, Ga. —C. B. Tanner,
prominent farmer of Washington
county, said today he had made 90
bushels of Irish cobbler potatoes
from half an acre planted this
spripg.
He has sold $25 worth of the crop
already and expects to sell more.
Tanner says ths potatoes brought
in more money than the same a
mount of cotton would have pro
duced at present prices. In addi
tion, the crop is now out of the way
and he can plant something else.
Dionne Turns Down Big Bid For
Home
Callander, Ont. Leo Dionne,
brother of Oliva Dionne, father of
the quintuplets, today confirmed re
ports that the latter had refused an
offer of SIO,OOO annually for the
sale of the drab farmhouse in which
the famous babies were born.
The offer was received from Chi
cago interests who proposed to dis
mantle the house and ship it to
Chicago where it would be exhibited,
it is said. Those making the offer
guaranteed Dionne SIO,OOO a year
as long as the house was exhibited.
Anew home was to be built for the
Dionnes as part of the offer.
Oliva and Mrs. Dionne, with their
five elder children, still live in the
little house in which the quintuplets
were born last May 28.
I ONLY NEED TO KNOW
I do not need to see my way,
I only need to know
That God is with me day by day
To show me where to go.
\
I do not need to doubt or fear,
I need to trust, that’s all,
And know His love is ever near
In answer to my call.
I do not need to suffer pain,
I need to understand
That I can be made whole again
By the Great Physician’s hand.
I do not need to feel alone;
I simply need to see
That God’s hand tightly holds my
own, t
And He walks here with me.
'
I need not lack now any more
For any lovely thing;
I need to know my birthright, for ,
My father is the King!
I do not need to wait and wait
To find the joy divine;
I need to know that heaven’s gate
Is in this heart of mine!
—Evelyn Gage Browne.