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THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937.
Here s Lavish l inale of Billy Bose's Aquacade at Great Lakes Exposition in Cleveland
SPECTACULAR AND COLORFUL are all the scenes of Billy Rose’s Aquacade,
but the grand finale, seen here, presents vividly the gorgeous costuming and unusual stag
ing typical of the gigantic dancing, singing, swimming production which has won unstinted
praise of the critics and the applause of the large crowds visiting the Exposition. The
•pecially created train worn by the central figure in the scene cost $7,000 and its unusual
STAND M,- v
WATCH
Over an Electric Range ... y^p|
A modem Electric Range frees you //yjjji I
from standing guard over food cooking on / iW
a steaming-hot, old-timey stove in a stifling / I
kitchen. You simply put the food on the / J my
top cooking units or into the oven. Then, I
you go where you want to, when you want J Mf;
to. Everything will be perfectly cooked
upon your return. The little time you spend
modem range does not give off heat
i I
jj , \
belongs. And it cooks as fast as any other
way. These advantages, plus the extremely U—L
low cooking cost, make it worth your
while to swing to Electric Cookery now! j L
If '
While our big “Cruise of Happiness”
, . p. Here is just one of our many outstanding
sale is on, great savings await you on tuec- valuet imagine a genuine Hotpoint
Electric Range priced so low! Completely
trir Rantres Come tO OUT Store and find equipped with Hi-Speed Calrod Units, it
® is as modern as the newest liner. Slightly
out how little it will cost you to chart your
' pay cash, and trade in
course to kitchen contentment. your eld stove, it costs ✓
Georgia Power Cos.
UNCLE NATCHEL AND SONNY
[ A THINK. I DO.TckA ,-N . /vES, 1 /SHES (?I<3Ht) /phTpul /TV
' A X" “'N ( UNCLE / RIGHT DOWN VDNDUH ) } l¥H/l£ / *Uy f VgK A. HER NOW. J (PRETTy-INf lUS WU2ZBNT 7
THE JACKSON HERALD. JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
size is evident in comparison with the 160 foot floating stage of Aquacade. Typical of FJilljr
Rose are the miniature battleships seen here plying the waters of Lake Erie. Yes, Canada
is the backdrop. The Exposition continues open in Cleveland through Sept. 6. Stars of the
Aquacade include Johnny Weismuller, Eleanor Holm and 500 singirig, dancing, swimming
beauties, and music for dancing by the audience is played by nine famous orchestras.
iH£ mountain girl
GENERAL ASSEMBLY THIS YEAR
COST $3,576 A DAY
The General Assembly’s total ex
pense of the 1937 regular session,
including $20,000 for advertising the
twenty-six constitutional amend
ments, was $230,343.02, a treasury
report showed.
It cost $1,614.80 for the senators
to travel to and from the prelimi
nary ten-day meeting, and the same
amount of mileage allowances went
to them for the sixty-day session.
The 205 House members drew
mileage allowances of $6,342.90.
twice.
At the rate of $7 a day for mem
bers, it took $3,600 to pay the sen
ators for the ten-day session, and
$21,800 for the reguar meeting.
Pay of -House members was $14,-
380 for the ten days and $86,480
for the longer period.
To attaches at the sixty-day ses
sion went $13,132 in the Senate and
$22,859.33 in the House, the figures
including the S6O per diem for the
Senate secretary and S7O for the
House clerk. Both officials have to
pay assistants in their offices for
their allowances.
In all, $184,740 went for travel
and salary expenses, and the balance
for advertising amendments, print
ing of bills, loud speaker systems
and other expenses.
DIVORCE NOTICE
Emory Ingram vs. Willie Temple
Ingram.
Petition for Divorce, In Jackson
Superior Court, August Term, 1937.
To the Defendant, Willie Temple
Ingram: The paintiff, Emory In
gram, having filed his petition for
divorce against Willie Temple In
gram, in this court, returnable to
this term of the court, and it being
made to appear that Willie Temple
Ingram is not a resident of said
county, and also that she does not
reside in this State, and an order
having been made for service on
her, Willie Temple Ingram, by pub
lication, this, therefore, is to notify
you, Willie Temple Ingram, to be
and appear at the next term of the
Superior Court to be held on the
first Monday in August, 1937, then
and there to answer this complaint.
Witness the Honorable Clifford
Pratt, Judge of the Superior Court.
This May 25th, 1937.
C. T. Storey, Jr., Clerk.
FUN FOR THE FAMILY
Poultry Expert
Papa (to Johnny), four years old
—Won’t you have another piece of
duck, Johnny?
Johnny—Yes, please, father, I
will, Duck’s my favorite chicken,
’cept turkey.
We All Did
“I started in life without a penny
in my pocket,” said Smith.
“And I,” put in Jones, “started in
life without a pocket.”
tt t t
Hey! Hey!
A farmer was once talking to
Abraham Lincoln and made an ob
viously exaggerated statement as to
the size of his hay crop.
“I’ve been cutting hay too,” said
Lincoln, smiling.
“Good crop?” asked the farmer.
“How many tons?”
“Well, I don’t exactly know how
many tons,” said Lincoln, carelessly,
“but my men stacked all they could
out-of-doors and then stored the
rest in the barn.”
XXX
He’d Qualify
Teacher—Have you heard of Juli
us Caesar?
Pupil—Year, sir.
Teacher—What do you think he
would be doing now if he were
alive?
Pupil—Drawing the old-age pen
sion.
X t X
Philanthropist
“I hear that Wilson left every
thing he had to an orphan asylum.
“Is that so? What did he l'eave?”
“Twelve children.”
ODE TO A HORSE
“Oh, horse, you are a wondrous
thing. No horns to honk, no bells
to ring; no license buying every
year, with plates to screw on front
and rear.
“No spark to miss, no gears to
strip; you start yourself, no clutch
to slip, no gas bills mounting every
day to steal the joy of life away.
Your inner tubes are all 0. K. and
thank the Lord they stay that way.
“Your spark plugs never miss nor
fuss; your motor never makes us
cuss. Your frame is good for many
a mile; your body never changes
style; your wants are few and easily
met—you’ve something on the auto
yet?.”
/ Uncle Natchel and Sonny are on your radio twice \
* each week. See listings of leading southern stations. /
PAGE SEVEN.
PITTMAN IS JUDGE.
HUMPHRIES RULES
Judge Claude C. Pittman is lcgal
ly judge of the Cherokee circuit,.
Judge John D. Humphries of Fulton
superior court decided in passing or*
constitutional questions raised in a
quo warranto petition filed by John.
C. Mitchell, of Dalton, seekiug to ob
tain the office.
The Pittman demurrer to the quc*
warranto proceedings was sustained
in full. It is understood Mitchell
will appeal the decision within the
-10-day limit on a bill of exceptions*
to the state supreme court.
WPA LIBRARY NOTES
Some of the most popular books*
for adults this summer are:
Douglas, Green Light.
Ethridge, As 1 Live and Breathe.
Woodward, Empire.
Larrimore, No* Lovelier Spring.
Mitchell, Gone With The Wind.
The last named is on the rental
shelf, the charges being a penny a
day.
The vacation reading club is well
under way. New members are wel
comed at any time during the sum
mer. The books to be read are
from grade 1, through 11.
The following girls and boys Itave
enrolled to date: Jackie Chester,.
Louise Moore, Mildred Cause, Eu
gene Moore, Winston and Wilson
Gause, Martha Ann Kelly, Wineva
Brown, Johnny Hartley, Betty Acier
hold, Virginia Kesler, Ethel Martin..
Jackie Mobley, Catherine Hargrove,.
Sara Deaton, Henry Robinson, Bob-
Appleby, Rome Manus, Irma F.
Wall, Charles Moore, Barbara Beat-
ty, Talmadge Appleby, Barbara
Johnson, Bert Kizer, Edwin Ader
hold, Irene Duncan, Lois Hendry
Jackson, Betty Jane Hardy, Bobby
Stacks, Eugene Toney, Mary Glass;
Crooks, Jeanette Hood, Emily Ader
hold.
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND FOR
TAXES
Georgia, Jackson County. There
will be sold, to the highest bidder,
for cash, before the court house
door in said county and state, be
tween the legal hours of sale on the
first Tuesday in August, 1937, the
following property, to-wit:
The life interest of J. M. Hood as
conferred by item five of the will of
Z. W. Hood, deceased, in and to ail.’
that tract or parcel of land, con
taining one hundred and eighteen
(118) acres, more or less, on the
west side of the Z. W. Hood home
place in Newtown District, Jackson
County, Georgia, bounded on the
north by lands of Blalock, on the
east by lands of W. J. Hood, on the
south by lands of G. S. Harris, wii
the west by lands of R. C. Hood*,
known as the lands received by J_
M. Hood under the will of Z. W.
Hood, deceased, and being the same
property conveyed by J. M. Hood!
to The Georgia National Bank of
Athens, of record in Book TT, Page
76, Clerk’s Office Superior Court,
Jackson County, Georgia.
Levied on as the property of J. ML
Hood, under a fi fa issued against
him by J. B. Loggins, Tax Collector
of Jackson County, Georgia, for-
State and County taxes assessed for
the year 1931, in the principal sum.
of $38.95, and same will be sold te>
satisfy the fi fa aforesaid, and the
following fi fas which are also in my
hands to be satisfied out of the pro
ceeds of said sale: 1932, $30.92j
1933, $25.58; 1934, $29.30; 1938,
$25.58; and 1936, $32.98, principal
amounts respectively. Levy made by
G. N. Breazeale, deputy sheriff of
said state and county, and turned:
over to me for advertisement, am.
provided by law. This 10th day off
June, 1937.
A. S. JOHNSON,
Tax Collector and Ex-Officio Sher
iff, Jackson County, Ga.