Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1938.
*IO,OOO 00
TRAVEL, PEDESTRIAN AND FARM ACCIDENT
INSURANCE POLICY
For $1.25
The Atlanta Journal offers as one of its services an excellent
type of travel, pedestrian and farm accident insurance policy
available to all members of the family between the ages of 10 to
69, inclusive. No medical examination is required. The policy
provides for loss of life, limb, limbs, sight or time caused by ac
cidental means, to the extent provided by the policy. Every day
traffic and pedestrian accidents become more numerous. You
owe it to yourself and family to secure this protection at once.
Simply use the blank below.
Application for SIO,OOO Travel, Pedestrian and Farm Accident
Policy Issued through The Atlanta Journal
DATE
To Registrar Agent, National Casualty Cos., Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, Ga.:
FULL NAME (Print) - A X®---------
Wives should not use husband’s initials (10-69) only
ADDRESS DATE BIRTH -
CITY PHONE NO.
BENEFICIARY RELATIONSHIP
(Name only one person—husband, wife, or some blood relation. If no beneficiarj,
is named, death benefits will be payable to your estate.)
In consideration of the issuance of a SIO,OOO Travel, Pedestyia nand Farm Acci
dent Policy of the National Casualty Company of Detroit, Mich., I attach $1.25 an
nual premium.
It is understood that:
1. Ape limits of the policy are 10 to 69, inclusive.
2. Policy will be effective when application is received and accepted as provided
in the contract between The National Casualty Cos., and The Atlanta Journal, and
policy is issued.
3. Policy will not cover persons blind, deaf, crippled, or who have lost an eye or
a limb; nor law enforcement officers, firemen and operating employes of a railroad
while on duty, nor any person entering a mine. All policies are issued subject to the
provisions of the policies themselves.
Applicant’s Signature
ORDER BLANK
To The Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
I am inclosing check or money order (made payable to THE ATLANTA JOURNAL)
as follows:
Check (x)
Subscription months $ NEW ( )
RENEWAL ( ,
Insurance; One Year _• $-.
Total $
Name
P. O. Address
Daily and Sunday subscription prices:
Three months, $3.25; six months, $6.50; twelve months, sl2.
Other rates furnished on request.
TRAVEL IN COMFORT
Air-Cooled —Air-Conditioned
Coaches and Pullmans
ALL CENTRAL OF GEORGIA MAIN LINE
TRAINS ARE AIR-COOLED—AIR
CONDITIONED
For Business or Pleasure ride where courtesy
—service and safety prevails.
Ask your agent to route you via
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
The Right Wav
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
GEORGIA’S HUMAN ADDING
MACHINE VISITS NEW YORK
New York.—When Willis Dysart
awakened one morning and remem
bered a string of numbers “a mile
long” that he had seen in a dream,
he decided he was gifted. And so he
is.
Just to prove it, the 15-year-old
human adding machine sat at a busy
street interestion here and, without
pencil and paper, totaled the num
bers on passing license plates for an
hour in his lightning-fast mathema
tical mind.
The boy, in New York for a radio
broadcast last night, lives in Omega,
Ga., where he has been weeding his
father’s garden and doing chores
about the farm since he was 5 years
old. It was only about a month ago
he put on his first pair of new shoes.
Willis was strolling along a rail
road right-of-way one day, he relat
ed, when a train passed. He memo
rized the numbers on the boxcars as
the long freight rolled up, and in an
hour he was able to repeat the num
bers—not only backward and for
ward, but to give the location of any
car in the train.
It was that night that he had the
dream.
Willis’ genius is something for
which no teacher may take credit.
He attended school only a few years,
but when he was entering the fourth
grade the work on the farm took
precedence over the Three R’s of the
class room. His mother died when
he was a child..
Scissors will tranish if you do not
dry them after cutting the stems of
wet flowers.
THE STORY OF A
TRAILER
(By Ralph T. Jones, in Atlanta
Constitution)
The original teller offered all sorts
of depositions and oaths as to the
absolute veracity of the following
story. At that, it must be true. For
no one short of a top-ranking fiction
eer could conceive all the details
that come with such natural se
quence.
The man and his wife were taking
a trip with the family car and trail
er attached. When either of the
two grew tired while driving, the
other would come to the rescue. And
the tired one frequently would go
into the trailer, lie down and sleep,
while the other drove.
The story starts when the husband
turned the steering wheel over to
his wife, went aboard the trailer, un
dressed, donned pajamas and slept
peacefully upon the comfortable
bed.
In the early evening his wife dis
covered they were running low on
gasoline. So drove into a filling
station for replenishment. The
stopping of the vehicle awoke the
husband.
He lifted a corner of a window
curtain, looked outside and saw
they were in a filling station. He
merely donned a pair of bedroom
slippers, stepped out and found his
way to the men’s rest room. When
he came out the trailer had gone.
There wasn’t a sign of wife, auto
mobile or trailer, anywhere.
The filling station attendant told
the pajama-clad victim of circum
stance that the woman had driven
away two or three minutes ago.
Where’* The Telephone!
“Telephone up the road and in
tercept her,” her husband demanded.
“Ain’t got— no phone,” the sta
tion attendant replied.
“But, man,” protested the hus
band, “my wife and everything I
have is in that car and trailer. I’ve
nothing here but these pajamas and
slippers. We must catch her.
Haven’t you got a car?”
“Got an old car, round back,”
the man admitted. “But she ain’t
much good. Won’t go fast.”
“Get her out and try,” the man
pleaded. “I must get to a telephone
or do something.”
So the station man’s son got out
the old car and they set off down the
road. After four miles they ran out
of gas.
And our pajama friend sat discon
solately on the bank beside the road
while his companion tried, futilely,
to induce a passing car to halt.
Futilely, that is, until a state
police patrol came along. They
stopped. Promptly. To investigate
why a man in pajamas and bedroom
slippers should be sitting beside the
road after dark.
Skeptical Woman
The situation explained, the police
set out to catch the trailer and
bring the wife back to her husband.
They caught up with her after 15
miles and then had to drive alongside
another mile or two, arguing with
the lady. She insisted she had brok
en no laws, exceeded no speed limits
and they couldn’t stop her.
When, at last, she came to a halt
she talked for a few minutes so fast
and hard the police couldn’t pry in
an edgewise word. At last one of
them asked where her husband was.
“Asleep in the trailer,” she snap
ped in reply. “And I won’t have
him disturbed. He’s tired.”
Another argument.
At last, of course, she consented
to look inside the trailer and check
on the husband. Then, equally of
course, she consented to the 20-mile
back-tracking to pick him up.
And the moral to the story is so
self-evident it shouldn’t need re
peating. Don’t leave an auto-trail
er without letting the driver know
you’re not aboard.
Sentinels
of Health
Don't Neglect Them!
Nature designed the kidney* to do *
marvelous Job. Their leak Is to keep the
do wing blood stream free of an races* of
toxic impurities. ’The act of living—fi/s
tistlf —la constantly producing waste
matter the kidneys must remove from
the blood if good health ia to endure.
When the kidneys fail to function a*
Nature Intended, there is retention of
waste that may cause body-wide dis
tress. One may suffer nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dixzinees,
getting up nights, swelling, puffin***
under th eyes—feel tired, nervous, all
worn out.
Frequent, scanty or burning passage*
may be further evidence of ltidney or
bladder dlsturbsnce.
The recognized and proper treatment
Is s diuretic medicine to help the kidney#
get rid of excess poisonous body waste.
Use Doan't Fill*. They have had mors
than forty years of public approval. Are
endorsed the country over. Insist oh
Doan'i. Sold at all drug store*.
SUPERIOR COURT
JURORS
The following have been drawn to
serve as jurors at the August Term
of Jackson superior court, which
convenes on the first Monday in Au
gust, 1938:
Grand Juror*
Ralph Ellington.
J. C. Hope.
T. W. Moore.
H. D. Dadisman.
I. W. Ethridge.
J. C. Head.
Jno. W. Sailors.
H. F. Braselton.
Ben Martin.
Luther Brock.
Thos. H. Turner.
Wm. A. Wills.
R. B. Smith.
Claud H. Fowler.
Jno. R. Hix.
Oscar L. Reynolds.
Coy Short.
M. C. Buffington.
F. D. Vandiver.
W. D. Hopkins.
J. O. Wallace.
W. J. Colquitt.
Leslie L. Williamson, Sr.
R. P. Hosch.
O. T. Butler.
C. N. Pinson.
H. E. Nunn.
M. T. Massey.
Lon G. Fields.
Jno. W. Maddox.
Traverse Jurors, First Week
D. C. Short.
J. W. Arnold.
W. M. Craft.
J. L. Fortnor.
N. E. Dailey.
J. L. Watkins.
R. O. Williamson.
J. J. Segars.
C. F. Hooper.
Ernest Hale.
J. P. Pirkle.
T. L. Patrick.
A. C. Hill.
W. T. Cody.
J. T. Titshaw.
Weldon H. Hosch.
E. H. Crooks.
L. P. Doster.
Alvin Collins.
Joe A. Davis.
Jas. H. Maddox.
Chas. W. Crisler.
F. C. Bell.
H. Jno. Braselton.
R. B. Sims.
J. F. Hale.
O. Ralph Hale.
Jesse C. Crawford.
W. T. Cole.
Ellis Lord.
W. A. Tucker.
Paschal Morrison.
J. H. Lord.
W. S. Barnes.
Jno. L. Gregory.
Marvin Wills.
Harland L. Sell.
Robt. T. Griffeth.
Jno. E. Edwards.
Gaines A. Pruitt.
A. J. Flanigan.
C. O. Hunt.
Otis C. Lacy.
J. P. Hanley.
Hoke Arthur.
Traverse Jurors, Second Week
Jno. W. Kesler.
Owen T. Spurlock.
W. H. Vandiver.
Jno. S. Brooks.
Webbie Wilson.
T. W. Telford.
W. C. Cole.
Andrew E. Murphy.
J. B. Hooper.
Joe Aaron.
L. P. Legg.
Pat S. Faulkner.
Wm. P. Gailey.
R. M. Davidson.
R. A. Minish.
Jack Gober.
Norris R. Holland.
Omer Wood.
W. E. Farmer.
Otis Whitmire.
Hubert Franks.
W. G. Hayes.
Ed L. Holland.
H. S. Fite.
L. F. Morrison.
D. S. Berryman, Jr.
Mays A. Venable.
Fred Williamson, Sr.
W. E. Mclntire.
Ferd M. Logan.
Andrew R. Holland.
B. H. Mathis.
C. W. Doss.
T. J. Aderhold.
J. T. Massey.
J. Morgan Ray.
Foster J. Holland.
H. E. Aderhold.
Jesse W. Short.
J. P. Adams.
Rupert T. Farmer.
Ben M. Logan.
Guy Strickland.
P. T. Pendergrass.
David Vaughn.
Alton Farmer.
Jewell E. Brumbalow.
A. L. McDonald.
Thos. C. Bridges.
Jim Wills.
E. M. Reynolds.
Claud E. Jackson, Sr.
Jno. D. Eckles.
H. L. Hutchins.
E. E. Martin.
Jim S. Patrick.
P. D. (Tom) Howington.
M. F. Webb.
Joe B. Minish.
B. M. Sailors.
New School Building At Dahlonega
Atlanta.—John K. Davis and Son
of Athens won the contract for con
struction of a dining hall-auditorium
at North Georgia College in Dah
lonega with a bid of $46,598.
The building will be two-story
brick, accommodating 500 students
for dining and 800 in the auditor
ium. The auditorium will be de
signed for audio-visual instruction.
PAGE THREE
Jackson County Home
Demonstration Newt
(By Elsie Bowman)
Tim* To Chock On Canning Needs
The canning season is in full
swing, and that means that it’s time
for housewives to check up and see
that their canning plans call for
enough canned food to take care of
family needs for the year.
Be certain that you have enough
quarts of vegetables, fruits, toma
to juice, meats, jellies, jams, mar
malades, and preserves for your
family during the winter season, be
fore it is too late to can them. Also,
it would be wise to put up a few ex
tra to have in case relatives or
friends drop in for a visit.
The wise home-maker will know
from experience just what the fami
ly needs and what they like during
the winter season. These needs
should be prepared for while the
vegetables and fruits arc available.
Now, just before we are entering
the main vegetable canning season,
every housewife should check up on
her equipment to see that it is in
shape for use. There should be
plenty of clean usable jars, along
with lids and rubbers.
Be certain that the dealer in the
community is supplied with three
types of cans—the plain tin, the
sanitary or R-enamel, and the C
enamel.
Ordinarily used in canning is the
plain tin. The enameled cans are
desirable for highly colored fruits
and vegetables, such as beets, squash,
pumpkin, red berries, strawberries,
and rhubarb. This special coated
can is designed to retain the natural
color of the canned goods. The C
enamel can has been developed_ to
prevent the discoloration in cans,
and may be used for green beans,
peas, red kidney beans, beets, suc
cutash hominy, and lima beans, but
not for acid fruits or vegetables.
The use of cans is recommended
when large amounts of non-acid
products are being put up, as they
are time savers. Using cans, how
ever, calls for a sealer. A pressure
cooker is very desirable in the can
ning of non-acid products, such as
corn, peas, beans, and meats.
“HARD TIMES” GRUMBLING
DRAWS JUDGE’S REBUKE
Milledgeville, Ga.—Judge James
B. Park belittled the present day cry
of “hard times” in his charge to the
Baldwin County grand jury in Su
perior Court here Monday, saying
“modern business men have never
really known hard times or depres
sion.”
Judge Park is presiding jurist of
the Ocmulgee judicial circuit.
“When I was a boy, the left wing
of Sherman’s Army marched through
this section of Georgia. They burn
ed and pilaged everything in sight.
The only thing they didn’t steal at
my father’s home was an old hen
that ran in the house and hid be
hind the door. After they left, we
had egg bread so often I became
fond of it. We went without neces
sary clothing and food, and there
was less grumbling than is heard to
day.”
The 80-year-old jurist cited the
improvements seen in his circuit and
said he had never seen so much
pleasure and at the same time so
much gambling.
“Let us follow the teachings of
the Bible. Let us love one another
and do what we can to help each
other,” he said.
The judge declared the “large
number of men and women in the
state penal systems should be a
warning to any man with a thimble
full of sense that crime does not
pay, should prevent them from sell
ing themselves into what might be
termed as enforced slavery for a
mere mess of pottage.”
POLITICS AND HOT WEATHER
“Yes, friends and fellow citizens,
it is going to be a long, hot and
noisy summer. You will learn what
a set of grand rascals the present
holders of your offices are, and what
vain, vicious, visionless but not
voiceless varmints constitute the op
position. And will the welkin ring?
Yea, verily! She will ring in Geor
gia from mountains to coast, from
the Chattahoochee to the Savannah,
from early June to mid-September.
She will echo and reverberate
through mountain, cove and over the
red old hills. She will fill the air
with oratory, as those who would
serve the people plead their causes
and run remorseless spears through
the quivering gizzards of their op
ponents.”—Editor H. T. Mclntosh, in
the Albany Herald.