Newspaper Page Text
tv * *< You To Bring Greet * Are AH Santa al the Cordially Visit Children Claus Here Invited On To Early Person¬ Cairo To In cccccc
isi the Afternoons of Sat¬ 05
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I urday, Dec. 17th, and n
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THE BIG 1949 CHRISTMAS TRADE FESTIVAL a
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IS SPECIAL REASON TO 00
to
SHOP CAIRO FIRST! jjj
$5
05
05
$
..BECAUSE CAIRO CONCERNS OFFER YOU, AS %
NEVER BEFORE, THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS / jj}%
PLUS MANY OTHER ADVANTAGES ... AND THEY'RE I
RIGHT HERE TO STAND BACK OF EVERY TRANSACT- %
ION!
TRY FOR YOURSELF! YOU, LIKE OTHERS,MAY BE „w
to
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SURPRISED AT THE GREAT VARIETY, THE GOOD* ff§
PRICES and the other advantages SHOPPING CAIRO*
offers! SHOP CAIRO ... Early in the Season, Early in the I
Week, Early in the Day. *
05
05
db.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT • • %
% 05
BESURETOHAVETHECHILDREN IN CAIRO FOR THE
THREE ADDITIONAL VISITS BY SANTA CLAUS IN PER- % I
i
10th, 2 P. M.; Saturday, Dec. 17th, 2 J I
SON -Saturday, Dec. !
P. M.; Friday, Dec. 23rd, 2 P. M.
HE HAS PROMISED TO HAVE SOME GIFTS FOR THEM! to 05
ALSO: CITY OF CAIRO POLICE DEPARTMENT DURING WILL EXTEND THE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL PARKING SHOP- ^ fa
COURTESIES TO OUT-OF-TOWN SHOPPERS PUBLICLY—MAIN
PING SEASON. THESE WILL BE IN ADDITION TO LARGE, 05
TAIN FREE PARKING AREAS CONVENIENT TO ALL BUSINESS AREAS! 05
05
SHOP CAIRO THIS CHRISTMAS!' to D* oh. -j.
and Reason- to
—SAVE TIME, TROUBLE, MONEY—Get the Greatest Available Selection 0%
able Prices, Always! fify '
«v
Following Cairo Concerns Are Actively Participating In the
1949 Cairo Christmas Trade Festival: to j
Eskew Service Station
Hillcrest Florist & Stationers
Eimer Muggridge (Do-Nut Shop)
Oliver's
S. & L. Furniture Co.
Selk-Hudson He-Po Co.
Bob's Gas, Inc.
Colonial Grocery & Market
Oixieland Stores
5-10c Store
McClenny Cairo Furniture Co.
Auto Supply Co.
farmers Fertilizer Co.
^ro Motor Co.
f Bayfield an Oil Co.
Slue Gable Creamery
Bushin's burner
Radio Service
«onomy Motors ,
;C "rison Barber Shop
^ uwannee urtis Super-Market Store
THE CAIRO MESSENGER. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1949
Wight & Browne
Hester & White
Cairo Furniture Co.
Mizell Drug Co.
Roddenbery Hardware Co.
Wight Hardware Co.
United Home & Auto
The Style Chop
Mrs. C. E. Powell's Grocery
Whidden's Grocery-Market
Kramer's Department Store
Womble Service Station
Sholar's Grocery
Grady Motors
Jack's Farm Supply
Cairo Flower-Gift Shop
Zebulon Theater
Mack's Gulf Service
Grady County Cleaners
R. R. Van Landingham, Inc.
Western Auto Associate Store
Cobb Furniture Co.
Style Shop
Clark Hardware Co. 011
Mixon Milling Co. fa 01 |
Jake Poller's Store j
Citizens Bank js$m, |
Cairo Banking Co.
Gandy Hardware Co.
Cairo Dry Cleaners
Hunter Service Station to
Grady Pharmacy to
Ira Higdon Grocery Co. to
H. V. Kell Co. fa
W. H. Richter Produce Co.
Grady County Ice & Locker 05
Cairo Ice Co. to
W. & K. Furniture Co. 05
Keenan Auto Parts Co. 05
Bowers Super-Service 01
Planters Building Supply Co.
B. & B. Seafood Market 05
T. J. Williams Service Station 05
A. & P. Tea Co. to
Cairo Messenger to
Sanders Jewelers to
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KILLED BY SUITOR -
■
BROCKTON, MASS.—Muriel Beal,
! 25, lies dead in front of a Brockton
j newspaper, Robert Lundeen, after 33, being her former shot boy by
j frii As Miss Beal was reading
i news bulletins, Lundeen fired three
i shots into her and then turned the
gun on himself, it was reported.
I He is not expected to live.
Ga. Cotton Growers
Face Problems Says
Rep. Steve Pace
j “The battle for survival is on
{ for the cotton industry, especial¬
ly here in Georgia,” declared
(Rep. Steve Pace, of the Third
District, in an address to a joint
meeting of Rotarians and Ki
wanians at Rockmart last week.
Representative Pace stated that
cotton farming is rapidly moving
west, where extensive cultiva¬
tion and mechanized practices are
making it more profitable to pro¬
duce it than in Georgia. Rep.
Pace is considered an authority
in Congress on cotton and its
problems. *,
“If cotton is to be saved in
Georgia, a number of things must
be done,” the speaker said. List
ed among them are: (a) inform
growers of the problem of over¬
production; (b) produce better
and cheaper cotton; (c) fight the
boll weevil and other threats ef¬
fectively; (d) produce cotton that
the mills want rather than what
the farmer wants to produce; (e)
prevent waste cotton; (f) classify
and identify every bale; (g) push
research in cotton to compare fa
vorably with that in the field of
synthetics.
While Pace made no statement
concerning his recent announce
ment to retire from Congress, he
nevertheless stated that what
must be done in the cotton in¬
dustry would no doubt wreck al
most anyone politically. He stat
ed that he would introduce at the
next session, a bill which he
knew would be unpopular among
growers and processors.
The proposed bill would incor¬
porate two things: (1) set up two
prices on cotton, an expert and a
domestic price, maintaining strict
acreage quotas; (2) price cotton
for the purposes for which it
might be used, meaning that some
b " y
Local Men Attend
Hatchery School
In Florida
A poultry hatchery school was
held at the Maxwell House in
Jacksonville, Florida, under the
auspices of the Raison Purina
Company, and was attended >by
more than 100 hatcherymen, feed
dealers and flock owners from
three states.
The purpose o f the one-day
session was to bring about closer
co-operation between hatchery
men and flock owners by discuss
ing problems of breeding, man
agement and feeding practices.
At this session, records were
shown where some local hatch
eryrnen, many of them in attend
ance, had a hatchability rate as
high as 89.2 per cent.
Among the speakers were Jerry
Hinshaw, Sales Manager of the
Purina Southeastern Division,
who conducted the meeting, Prof.
N. R. Mehrhoff, head of the Poul¬
try Department, University of
Florida, Drs. H. L. Wilche and
Schofield, from Purina
and Curt Severson, Pu¬
poultry specialist.
Amony those at the meeting
C. R. Beak and Joe Taylor,
Mixon Milling Company in
Thomas Jefferson was only 33
old when he drafted the
of Independence.
The Veterans
Corner
Here are authorative answers
from the Veterans Administra
tion to four questions of interest j
to former servicemen and their,
departments:
Q. Will I be entitled to sub- !
sistence allowance allowance if |
I enter school under the GI Bill ]
to became an accountant?
A. If you enter training in aj
state-approved institution that J
has 'been in operation for morej
than one year, you may be eligible
to receive subsistence.
Q. I have never applied for a
GI loan, but now I am delinquent
in a loan I secured to buy some
stock and equipment for my farm.
Will VA guarantee a loan to meet
this indebtedness if I can find
a lender?
A. Under certain conditions,
VA may guarantee your loan to
liquidate your delinquent indebt¬
edness which was incurred in the
purchase of stock and equipment
for the operation of your farm.
Q. My uncle is a disabled
peacetime veteran and unable to
work because he is ill. Is he en¬
titled to hospitalization in a VA
hospital?
A. Your uncle may be entitl¬
ed if he was discharged under
other than dishonorable condi¬
tions for a disability incurred in
line of duty or is receiving com¬
pensation for a service-connected
or service-aggravated disability.
Q. As the widow of a World
War II veteran, I was receiving
death compensation from VA.
Compensation was discontinued
when I remarried, but shortly
thereafter, my husband, a non¬
veteran, was killed in an accident.
Am 'I entitled to the compensa¬
tion I was receiving prior to my
second martriage?
A. Under the law, you lost
your entitlement to compensation
when you remarried.
Veterans wishing further in -1
Hadacol Helps
Textile Workers
On The Job
The great textile mills ef the
Carolinas are booming again with
shifts working day and night to
turn out the nation’s finest mate¬
rials, and HADACOL is doing its
part to keep folks on the job.
Many textile workers have re
orted the wonderful relief which
as been brought them by
HADACOL with its five B vita¬
mins and four important minerals.
Two of these workers, a young
father employed by the great
Mills at
and a mother,
working at a
mill in nearby
Salisbury,
N. C., recently
told how HAD
A C O L had
helped keep
them on the
j oh.
Jay W. Bam
hardt. Route 3,
Box 343. Kan
napolis. N. C.,
is 30 old
and the proud father in of two chil¬
dren. His work the Cannon
Mills calls for a great deal
standing up.
“I had been ill for several
years,” said Mr. Barnhardt as he
explained how close he came to
waving to give up his work. “I
'suffered with a weak stomach,
kit became worse and worse with
gastric disturbances. I just could
not hold food and no food agreed
with me. I could not sleep and
■finally I became so sick that my
legs got weak as I worked in
the mill each day.”
Mr. Barnhardt, like so many
sufferers, had tried many prepa¬
rations without relief, when he
heard about HADACOL.
“After the second bottle of
HADACOL I began to feel better
and to regain the weight I had
lost," said Mr. Barnhardt. ‘‘My
digestion became normal again
and today I am as well as ever.
My legs no longer bother me.
I eat and enjoy my food. I sleep
well and have plenty of energy.”
Mr. Barnhardt has taken sev¬
eral bottles of HADACOL and
now takes the famous vitamin
and mineral preparation had his to wife help
stay well. He has
take it with wonderful results
land has recommended it to his
(friends in the mill.
t Mrs. Maggie H. Poole. 1503
(Caroline Avenue, in Salisbury,
jN. C., had become so ill that she
was forced to give up her work
but soon after hearing the won¬
derful news about HADACOL she
iwas back on the job and has been
doing swell ever since,
i “I was tired, weak and nerv¬
ous,” said Mrs. Poole. “I suffered
indigestion and food didn’t agree
with me. I also had headaches.
(After taking five bottles of HAD
lACOL I felt good and was back
on the job at the mill. I had tried
so many things that real the blessing HADA
COL pew s wa£ a to
wwk
m
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4.A.\ «
Mr. Barnhardt
you like for fear of being in mis¬
ery afterwards. Many people also
suffer from constipation. And
while these symptoms may be the
results of other causes, they are
surely and certainly the signs of
lack of B vitamins and minerals
which HADACOL contains. And
if you suffer from such a defi¬
ciency disorder, there is no
known cure except the adminis¬
tration of the vitamins and min¬
eral, which your system lacks.
It is easy to understand, there¬
fore, why countless thousands
have been benefited by this
amazing tonic, HADACOL.
So it matters not how old you
are or who you are ... it matters
not where you live or if you have
tried all the medicines under the
sun, give this wonderful prepara¬
tion HADACOL a trial. Don’t go
on suffering. Don’t continue to
lead a miserable life. Many per¬
sons who have suffered and
waited for 10 to 20 years c*r even
longer, are able now to live
happy, comfortable lives because
HADACOL supplied the vitamins
and minerals which their systems
needed. Be fair to yourself. Tem¬
porary relief is not enough for
you.' Give HADACOL a trial!
Insist on the genuine HADA¬
COL. Don’t be misled. Accept no
substitute.
Sold at all leading drug stores.
Trial size only $1.25, but save
money; buy the large family and
hospital size, only $3.50. If your
druggist does not handle HADA¬
COL, order direct from The Le
Blanc Corporation, Lafayette, La^
and when the postman brings
your package just pay the amount
plus the c. o. d. and postage
If you remit with the order we
will pay the postage. feel perfectly
Then, if you don’t
satisfied after using HADACOL
as directed, just return the empty
carton and your money will be
cheerfully re funded. Nothing
could be^ fairer.
MM.
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• PRIMPING PETE * i
CHICAGO, ILL.—Getting ready for
National Livestock Show which
opened here on Nov. 26, Dorothy
Smith of Peoria, Ill., powders nos<|
of "Pete," a Southdown lamb. - I
formation about veterans 'bene¬
fits may have their questions
answered by writing the nearest
VA Regional Office.
L. E. PRINCE SHOWS
A NEW-STYLE CORN
If L. E. Prince develops the
type of corn which he brought to
the Messenger office, there may
be a serious shuck shortage in
the future. This ear, or ears,
which he brought in has eight
ears all done up in one shuck.
One ear is full grown, normal
corn, and around it are seven
half-ears, or slightly stunted
ones.
Mr. Prince, who lives on Route
1, just off the Hawthorn Trail,
said his corn was of the Genuine
Little Cobb variety, and would
produce about 50 bushels to the
acre. This was the only ear, how¬
ever, that took to the new pack¬
aging idea. This is a very corny
story.
Theodore Roosevelt at 42 was
(the youngest man to be inaugur
ater as President of the U. S.
me. I have more appetite and
eat what I want to. I feel better
than I have in a long time.”
Mr. Barnhardt and Mrs. Poole
were both suffering from a lack
of B vitamins and the minerals
which HADACOL contains.
HADACOL comes to you in liquid |
form, easily assimilated in the,
blood stream so that it can go
to work right away.
A lack of only a small amount,
of B vitamins and certain min- 1
erals will cause digestive disturb¬
ances . . .
food will
agree with
. . . You
have an
stomach
You will
from
burn, gas
and your
will sour
your
and you w i
not be able
eat the
THREE
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Mrs. Poole