Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
NOTES FROM THE NATIONAL
CAPITOL
(By E. B. Betts)
On September 26, 1922, at Chevey
Chase, Maryland, the late Senator
Hon. Thomas E, Wataon passed
away, after serving nineteen months
as United States Senator from Geor
gia, the Empire State of the South.
A biography was first written by
Hon. W. W. Brewton, of Fort Val
ley. Georgia. The biography has
just been written by Prof. C. Van
Woodward, of the University of
Florida. It is published by The Mc-
Millan Company, of New York City,
Sixty-Fifth Avenue, at $3.75 per
copy. It is on sale here at several
book stores in the District of Colum
bia. He was born September 5,
1856, in Columbia County, Georgia.
He was buried at Thomson, McDuffie
County, Georgia. He served here as
a member of the House from March
4, 1891, to March 4, 1893.
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On March 30th was the birthday
anniversary of Miss Thelma E. Wil
liams, Secretary to the Legislative
Sections of the Department of Jus
tice. She has been a long federal
employe. She spent twenty years
on Capitol Hill before joining the
staff at the Justice Department, six
teen years as secretary to the late
Hon. W. W. Larsen of the old
Twelfth District of Georgia, and
four years she spent as secretary to
Hon. IS. T. Castellow of the Third
District of said State. She is from
Byron, Georgia, Peach County.
She is a descendent of the sign
ers of the Declaration of the
American Independence, and distin
guished American. She is a nice and
excellent lady, and very intelligent,
and a great credit to the Empire
State of the South, which she richly
deserves.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
arrived at the? White House, April
3rd, at No. 1000 New York Ave., N.
W., after 10 days rest at Warm
Springs, Georgia. He arrived at
12.30 o’clock. He was accompanied
by Hon. Harry Hopkins and Mrs. F.
D. Roosevelt.
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April is a great month for wars.
The War for American Independ
ence began with the Battle of Lex
ington, April 19th, 1775. America
declared war against Spain, April
21, 1808. And the war began in
April. Between the .States, 1861, and
eQded April 9, 1865, by the sur
render of General R. E. Lee to Gen
eral U. S. Grant, at Appotmox Court
House, Virginia.
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It was the administration of Thos.
Jefferson, third President of the
United States, on April 30, 1803,
that a treaty with France was sign
ed which enabled the Federal Gov
ernment to buy the Louisiana Pur
chase, for $15,000,000. Out of this
territory thus acquired, have been
14 States carved, and from it has
come men and statesmen who have
played a dominant part in the life
of the nation on Capitol Hill.
Mr. William Oren Hill, Jr., of
Toccoa, Stephens County, Georgia,
the Empire State of the South, has a
nice position here ns page, under
the patronage of Hon. B. Frank
Whelchel, of the famous Ninth Dis
trict of Georgia. He is a nice young
man. He is the son of lion. W. O.
Hill, Sr., of Stephens County, of said
State.
B. Y. P. U. NOTICE
Better speakers and intermediate
sword drill contest of all B. Y. P.
U's. in Sarepta Association will be
held at east Athens Baptist church,
Sunday. April 24th, beginning at
p. m. We desire representa
tives from each B. T. U. organiz
ation. Please have your seniors and
intermediates ready and present to
enter this contest. We hope to have
Miss Francis Whitworth, state work
er. present to conduct the sword
drill.
W. S. Lowe, Director, B. T. U.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank each and every
one who was so kind through the
illness and death of our darling
imb> Henry Maize Harbin, and for
e beautiful floral offerings. May
God bless each one of you Wa
especially wish to thank Dr. W C
Kennedy for his faithfulness and
kindness during his illness.
Mrs. Elizabeth Harbin.
Mrs. W. R. Kent and Family.
1. S. Smith and Family.
State Collector Marion H. Allen
reported federal income tax pay
men Ls in Georgia for March showed
a gain of $177,193, an increase of
3.8 per cenfc over the same period
last year. The total for the month
was $4,847,446.
BRIEF NEWS ITEMS
Brown Will Sftoali At Goinovillo
Rally
Gainesville, Ga.—Farmers of 25
near by counties are expected to
hear Harry L. Brown, assistant
secretary of agriculture, speak here
April 26 during a field day rally in
the erosion-control demonstration
area.
Project Manager T. O. Galloway
said visitors would be taken on a
tour of the demonstration area be
fore Brown's talk.
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Dionne Quints Have New Brother,
The 13th Child
Callander, Ontario. —Oliva Dionne,
father of the quintuplets, hurried
Tuesday to tell his five famous
daughters they had anew brother—
but .they already knew.
Their nurses had told them Mon
day of the birth of a seven and a
half-pound boy to 29-year-old Mrs.
Dionne. He was the Dionnes’
thirteenth child.
Before quints Marie, Yvonne, An
nette, Cecile and Emilie were born
May 28, 1934, there were Rose,
Thereasa, Pauline, Ernest, and Dan
iel, Oliva, Jr., was born July 9,
1936. One child died in infancy.
Griffin Pastor Is Named To Fill
Byrd’s Place
Macon, Ga.—Bishop W. N. Ains
worth made announcement from his
office of the following changes in
the North Georgia Conference, ef
fective at once. These changes
were made on account of the recent
tragic death of the Rev. H. L. Byrd,
who was presiding elder of the Ath
ens-Elberton district.
Rev. M. M. Maxwell, heretofore
pastor of First church, Griffin, be
comes presiding elder of the Athens-
Elberton district.
The Rev. Wallace Rogers goes
from Epworth church in Atlanta to
First church in Griffin.
Rev. Z. C. Hayes goes from Madi
son to Epworth church in Atlanta.
Rev. J. B. Smith goes from New
nan Springs to Madison.
Rev. J. K. Brown goes from
White to Ncwnan Springs. White
will be supplied by the presiding
elder of the Dalton district.
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Walton Church 100 Years Old
Monroe, Ga. Bethel Baptist
Church in Walton County, celebrat
ed its one hundredth anniversary in
exercises Sunday.
Speakers included the pastor, the
Rev. B. H. Waugh; Miss Moina
Michael, the Rev. Toombs MeGaugh
ey, the Rev. J. L. Clegg, Mrs. W. H.
Nunnally and Dr. Aquila Chamlee.
Desserts
A TOUCH of spice makes many
things nice. And it. does more
than that, it makes many things
so palatable that it simplifies the
task of the housewife in introduc
ing that variety into the diet
which all nutritionists recommend.
Such a disli as Baked Pineapple
and Rhubarb, for instance, would
lie hard to sell to your family with
out the addition of cinnamon and
cloves. And what would Peach
Rice Pudding or Apple Cup Cus
tards taste like without a touch
of nutmeg? And how could Pear
and Cranberry Salad or Pineapple-
Ginger Mousse get along without
a little ginger?
Decide for Yourself
The only way to answer defi
nitely these rhetorical questions is
to try some of these dishes for
yourself, with and without the
spices. But we recommend that
yon try them first as a good dieti
tian devised them, and then you’ll
_ &
never dream of omitting the spice.
The first is
linked Pineapple and Rhubarb:
Cut six cups rhubarb, unpeeled, in
small pieces. Put in a baking dish
with one cup sugar, ten cloves,
one-eighth teaspoon cinnamon and
one cup pineapple syrup. Cover
and bake till tender at 375 degrees
for about half an hour. Serve
'old with some simple cake, such
as sponge cake. Serves eight.
Nutmeo Makes All the Difference
Pea r h Rice Pudding: Mix to
gethei one and a half cups boiled
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
BRIEF NEWS ITEMS
4-H Poultry Project
Rome, Ga.— Beginning a 4-H
Club poultry project here Saturday,
twenty-two Floyd County girls rang
ing in age from 10 to 15 years, start
ed their new task with 1,175 baby
chicks. A local hank financed the
project with chick loans totaling
$240.80, to cover the cost of chicks
and equipment. The girls will keep
4-H Club records of their poultry
work and will be taught to prepare
their chickens for market.
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’’Lady From Long” To Have
Opposition
Ludowici.—“The lady from Long”
is to have opposition in her race for
the Democratic nomination for the
general assembly from Long county.
On Saturday, the final day for quali
fying as a candidate for this office,
T. L. Howard and Mrs. Helen Wil
liams Coxon both qualified. Mrs.
Coxon is the incumbent. Her op
ponent is a former member of the
House who was succeeded by Mrs.
Coxon four years ago.
Japanese Beetles In Georgia
Atlanta, Ga.—-Treatment of ap
proximately 15 acres of ground in
the Druid Hills residential section of
Atlanta, in an attempt to eradicate
an infestation of Japanese beetles,
is scheduled to begin this week.
State Entomologist Manning S.
Yeomans said mapping of the area
was complete, and application of a
ton of lead arsenate to each acre
would follow. The poison is applied
in dry form, and washed into the
ground with water.
The Druid Hills infestation, in
DeKalb county, is the only one re
ported in Georgia.
Watcfi YourJ
Kidneys/
Help Them Cleanse the Blood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your kidneys are constantly filtering
waste matter from the blood stream. But
kidneys sometimes lag in their work—do
not set as Nature intended—(ail to re
move impurities that, it retained, may
poison the system and upaet tbs whole
body machinery.
Symptoms may be nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dizziness,
getting up nights, swelling, puffiness
under the eyes—a feeling of nervous
anxiety and loss of pep and strength.
Other signs of kidney or bladder dis
order may be burning, scanty or too
frequent urination.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Use
Doan’s Pills. Doan'a have been winning
new friends for more than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputation.
Are recommended by grateful qroplc the
country over. Atk i/our neighiw rl
POAMiPILLS
rice, one-third cup sugar and one
fourth teaspoon nutmeg. Add the
contents of a 1-pound can sliced
peaches, cut in pieces, and enough
peach syrup to just moisten. Pour
into a buttered baking dish, dot
with one tablespoon butter, and
bake in a moderate oven —350 to
375 degrees—for about twenty-five
minutes. Serve warm or cold with
thin cream flavored with nutmeg.
Serves six.
Apple Cup Custards: Beat three
egg yolks slightly, and add one
fourth cup sugar, one tablespoon
lemon juice, the contents of a No.
2 can apple sauce, three-fourths
cup mGk and one-eighth teaspoon
nutmeg. Fold in three stiffly
beaten egg whites, pour into cus
tard cups and sprinkle nutmeg
over top. Set in hot water and
bake in a slow —325 degree—oven
for about tarty minutes or until
set. Serve cold. Serves eight
These Have Ginger
Pear and Cranberry Salad: Re
move peeling from three rip#
pears, cut in halves and scoop out
the core. Place in lettuce leave*.
Mash one cream cheese and three
tablespoons canned cranberry
sauce, and then cream them to
gether until very smooth. Add s
few grain's salt, and pipe this mix
ture around the edge of the pear
halves. Fill the center with cream
mayonnaise and sprinkle with
chopped preserved ginger. Makes
six.
Pineapple-Ginger Mousse: Soak
one teaspoon gelatin in two table
spoons cold water, then dissolve
in one cup hot crushed pineapple.
Add one-fourth cup sugar and one
fourth cup chopped candied gin
ger. and allow to cool. Fold In two
cups cream, beaten, pour Into cov
ered molds and pack in lee and
salt for four hours. Serves six
to eight.*
FERTLIZER
I have a limited stock on hand of my well
established brands of fertlizer as follows:
MOBLEY’S 9-3-3
MOBLEY’S 10-4-4
MOBLEY’S 8-5-4
Every single sack of these goods were mix
ed and bagged before the reduction in prices.
The allotment of acreage under the control program for
1938 will be reduced, and all cotton made on your allotment can
be sold without paying tax. For this reason, every one should
use a dependable fertilizer in order to get the best yields.
I appreciate your trade.
Respectfully,
H. I. MOBLEY
JEFFERSON, GA.
DEATH ON THE UPGRADE j >
Jl IP
on Ceirgiii Hkkwjys
DRIVE SAFELY CRUSADE
To reduce automobile accidents on our highways and
streets—accidents which are daily taking lives of Georgia
citizens—Woco-Pep dealers are launching a Drive Safely
Crusade in which leading civic organizations are being
invited to act as CO-SPONSORS.
The purpose of the emsade is to persuade motorists to ap
aly the Golden Rule to driving and to observe "common
sense" rules of safety at all times.
everyone can lend a helping hand in this Crusade. Her#
s how you can do your part—
Sign the Drive Safely Pledge
TER THE BIG PRIZE CONTEST
No Cost - No Obligation
itop in at your Woco-Pep dealers' today. Get a Pledge Card
nd an Entry Blank for the April Prize Contest. You don't
iave to buy a thing—there's no obligation whatsoever.
>o this NOW. Be among the first to sign the pledge to
)rive Safely To Save A Life—Avoid An Accident—Pre
ent An Injury.
Get this
Free Emblem
for your car !
SAVE A LIFE - AVOID AN ACCIDENT - PREVENT AN INJURY
©CULBERSON BROS., Jefferson, Ga.
TOM WATKINS, Jefferson, Ga.
Two-Man Senate Race In Sixteenth
District
Swainsboro, Ga.—The list for en
tries of candidates for senator from
the Sixteenth Senatorial District
closed Saturdr-y at noon, and J. B.
Spivey and J. Leonard Rountree are
the only candidates qualifying.
The Sixteenth District is com
posed of Emanuel, Truetlen, Lau
rens and Johnson Counties.
Found on Jefferson and Winder
Highway a truck Tarpaulin. Apply
to C. E. Fleeman, Jr.
"X” Will Mark Tipsy Drivers In
Augusta
Augusta, Ga.—Means of holding
druken drivers in public scorn had
been devised here by City Court
Judge Gordon W. Chambers in a
campaign to eliminate traffic acci
dents.
“On the rear of cars driven by
persons convicted of driving while
drunk will be painted an “X”, Judge
Chambers said in announcing his
new plan for sentencing offenders.
THURSDAY. APRIL 14, IMA
COTTON SEED
For Sale, Recleaned Farm Relief
Cotton Seed. See G. H. Martin, at
Jefferson Motor Cos.
MULES FOR SALE
One pair of good medium size
mules for sale, worth the money.
Apply to George W. Bailey.
PIGS FOR SALE
Y and! f ° r Sale ' S "