Newspaper Page Text
France Claims This Dam Is the Biggest
••••*• . :J
T'
"X W
PICTURED here is a dam which
I France says is the biggest in the
world. It is on the IUver Isere and
has been constructed to supply elec¬
tric power for the Paris-Lyons-
Medlterranean railway.
Bedtime Story for Children
By THORNTON W. BURGESS
PETER LISTENS FOR
SOMETHING
■ He Saw a Flock of Birds Moving
■ Steadily From the Direction of the
Far North.
■ better, and looked up in the sky. Very
■ bigii up, flying in the shape of a letter
■ V lie saw a flock of birds moving
■ steadily from the direction of the Far
’ffh. By the sound of their voices
ie knew that they had flown far that
■ 'k'.v !ln d were tired. One bird was in
■ tke lead, and this he guessed to be
°'U friend Honker. Straight over
s head they passed, and as Peter
-tened to their cries he felt within
iim the very spirit of the Far North.
I * !iat great, wild, lonely land which he
Know
1 “<« cnop suey is un¬
known in China—except in
a few semi-foreign restau¬
rants. It was “invented” and
named in the Southern Paci¬
fic railroad camps in Ameri¬
ca, more than half a century
a S°- A cook for Chinese
workmen threw in a little of
everything chop and called it
suey.”
©. McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
WNU Service.
had never seen, but of which he had
so often heard.
Suddenly Honker turned and headed
in the direction of the Big IUver. Then
he began to slant down, his flock fol¬
lowing him. Presently they disap¬
peared behind the trees along the bank
of the Big River. Peter gave a happy
sigh. “They are going to spend the
night there,” thought lie. “When the
moon comes up I will run over there
for then they will come ashore, and I
know just where. Now that they’ve
arrived I know that winter is not far
away. Honker's voice is as sure a sign
of the coming of winter as is Winsome
Bluebird's that Spring will soon be
here.”
©. T. W. Burgess. WNU Service.
"The trouble with most wives,” says
knowing Norah, "is that the only time
they will listen to what their husbands
have to say is when they talk in their
sleep.”
©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
QUESTION BOX
8, ED WYNN . . .
The Perfect Fool
Dear Mr. Wynn:
I went into a restaurant the other
day and ordered some “liver and ba¬
con.” The waitress brought me some
bacon, but said I would have to wait
for my liver until after the two men
at the next table were served. What
answer have you for that?
Truly yours.
PHIL HARMONIC.
Answer: That is the toughest ques¬
tion I’ve had, but I've worked it out.
The two men must have ordered be¬
fore you placed your order. They prob¬
ably ordered liver, tiie same as you.
She served them first because she
didn’t want you to have your “liver
out of order.”
Dear Mr. Wynn:
i just arrived in town today and
noticed some signs on the lamp post.
I am a little nearsighted and cannot
see what are on the signs. Can you tell
me what they are for and why they
are up so high?
Yours truly,
I. VORY.
Answer: They are put on top of the
lamp posts so that people passing will
see them. You are supposed to climb
up the post and read the sign. If It
says “fresh paint” then you know you
shouldn’t lean against the post*
Dear Mr. Wynn:
I am keeping company with a young
woman who Is very fond of horses. I
am thinking of marrying her. Every
one tells me a woman who loves horses
will make a good wife. Do you be¬
lieve that?
Sincerely,
I. M. A. BOOB.
Answer: All I can say is that it is
true a woman loves anything she can
Dear Mr. Wynn: chil¬
I am a married man with three
dren. 1 keep working but seem unable
to make both ends meet. What shall
I do?
Sincerely,
AL. TRUISTIC.
Answer: That's easy. If you can’t
make both end3 meat, make one vege¬
tables.
IS), the Associated WNU Service. Newspapers.
DADE COUNTY TIMES: NOVEMBER 29, 1934
PAPA KNCWS-I
“Pop, what is scrutiny:^* j
"Scientist's glance.”
©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Servj
SOME TESTED G(
'T'HEItE A apple is day an keeps d^^Blng tnPdoctor that awajf, “C c
a
and an onion a day keeps
away. A good time to indulge UP
odoriferous bulb is at n time
you will not annoy others. OnffjT'
are such wholesome vegeAibies thi p
they should be served at least twice
week in some form during the entire
winter. An onion sirup cannot be ex¬
celled for a cough, and a poultice of
chopped raw onion, mixed with rye
flour with a bit of vinegar to moisten,
makes a remedy for any lung trouble.
Not pleasant, but very effective.
Lemon Pudding.
Mix one cupful of flour, two egg
yolks well beaten, one lemon, juice
and rind, one teaspoonful of melted
butter, and one cupful of milk. When
well blended fold In the well-beaten
whites of the eggs and bake in a shal¬
low baking dish set Into hot water.
Bake three minutes. Serve hot or
cold.
Baked Stuffed Onions.
Tliis makes a most satisfying main
dish. Peel and cook ttie onions in
boiling salted water for ten minutes.
Take out the centers, drain well. Par¬
boil a small green pepper and remove
the seeds, peel 12 large mushroom
caps, cook In three tablespoonfuls of
butter with the onion scooped from
the centers, finely chopped. Add one-
Putting State Heroes on the Skids
ml lLU <*[
TATUES of state heroes in Statuary hall, in the Capitol at Washington, were
becoming too numerous and too heavy for safety, so to relieve the strain it
is ordered that thirty of them be removed to other quarters. The illustration
ows the removal of John Hanson who, according to Marylanders, was the
Happenings Ove< the State
Price'of straight gasoline ad¬
vanced one-half a cent over the
State last week. It is now selling
for 16 cents.
Workers began a house-to-house
canvass in Columbus recently in the
Columbus Better Housing Cam¬
paign. The drive was held for two
days.
The Washington County Cotton
Production Control Association and
Farm Agent J. K. West have asked
changes in the administration of the
Bankhead Act.
Dr. H. E. Stanford of Atlanta was
named president of the Chiroprac¬
tic Research Society of Georgia at
its bi-monthly meeting held at Co¬
lumbus recently.
The annual dinner of the Seventh
District Rural Letter Carriers’ As¬
sociation was attended at Rome
recently by 150 representatives
from 11 counties.
Pronmlent newspaper men of the
State were on the program for ad¬
dresses at the meeting of the First
District Press Association, held at
hVaynesboro recently.
W A collection of art treasures of the
principal schools of Italian paint¬
ing was exhibited at Macon re¬
cently in the Student Activities
Building of Wesleyan College.
Truck farmers of Rabun (Clay¬
ton) County have received approxi¬
mately $50,000 for sale of their
products this year. County Agent
H. M. Morris reported recently.
The Trust Company of Georgia,
of Atlanta, was the successful bid¬
der ou $65,000 4(4 City of Newnan
public school and Bwimming pool
bonds. The high bid was $75,193.
In the three-cornered race for
mayor of Elberton recently. Major
H. P. Hunter was nominated. Joe
Allen wsa victorious in the coun-
cilmanic race from the fourth ward.
Larger quantities of a majority of
food and feed crops ar^ being pro¬
duced in Georgia this year-than
last, the State Crop Rcportiif»er-
vice announced at Athens last'week^
Members of First Baptist Church,
Griffin, have gone on record as op¬
posing S 11 njkwin ovic» i^prfiriffin
"for any Pictures for
charity begaffsnowinir here Suny/TL
day.
The town of Tybee’* fire engine,
the first owned by the seaside mu¬
nicipality, is now at the beach and
equipment for it, including hose,
etc., was expected to arrive early
this week.
Somebody with a wardrobe bad¬
ly in need of replenishing broke
Into the Hall Store at Blue Ridge
on a recent night. Among other
things, suits valued at $1,000 were
taken.
Otis Turner, of Colquitt County,
has been appointed supervisor of
the farm census in the Albany dis¬
trict, Representative E. E. Cox, of
the Second Georgia District, has
announced.
The Towns County camp was rat¬
ed Pavianr first In in the Forestry-Geological^ Georgia'
Review in Ilia the otondinr, standing of «P' flanm
CCC camps under supervision of
the State Forest Service for the
third period.
Members of two Augusta Chris¬
tian Temperance Unions have pass¬
ed resolutions requesting the State
Legislature to call for a county-
unit referendum on tfie State bone-
dry prohibition law.
The importance of the preserva¬
tion of civil rights guaranteed by
the Constitution was stressed by
Judge E. Marvin Underwood in his
charge to the Federal Grand Jury
at the opening of the November
term of United States District Court
at Rome last week.
Jack Williams, past president of
the Georgia Press Association and
editor of the Waycross Journal-
Herald, announces that a recent
meeting was held at Waycross to
lay plans for building a scenic
highway through the Okefenokee
Swamp, from that city to Lake City,
Florida.
In a book, the pages and cover of
which bear the shape of the map
of Georgia, entitled “Facts About
Georgia,” compiled and edited by
Louis N. Geidert, and publishd un¬
der the auspices of the Georgia
Chamber of Commerce, Bartow
County, of which Cartersville is the
county seat, is given quite a bit of
publicity in telling of its vast wealth
of national resources including such
minerals as iron, manganese, ochre,
bauxite and limestone.
Work has been started on the
new Sylvester-Ashburn road. This
la an entirely new route and inter¬
sects with the Sylvester-Cordele
road, near the northern city limits
of Sylvester.
Timber lands, of which there are
hundreds of thousands of acres in
Georgia, and especially in the
southern section of the State, have
been made eligible for loans through
the Federal Land Banks, the of¬
fice of Senator Richard B. Rus¬
sell, Jr., announced last week.
Portrait of C Me
Business Man
By ANNE CAMPBELL
npHEY say in business he plays chess,
■t He takes no stock In happiness,
Or the well being or the hope
Of those who work for him, and grope
Back to the light of day again.
The boss plays chess. . . . His
paw ns are men.
He sits aloof from those wiio try
To please him, with a wary eye
Upon his interests . . . and feels
Himself a man of high ideals.
With no thought but of gain, he plays
A game of stalling and delays.
I think there Is a Power that sees
His many needless cruelties,
And sometime, though the years are
long,
That bait the weak, and feed the
strong.
The Ross will hear, as lights grow dim:
“Checkmate. It will be said
to him!
WNU Service.
per mix and a Fill tabIesi>oonful^o^^)Utter six me(H*jiJ^Mnnlon9 ;
well.
and top each with a‘ 4PRin cap.
Put into a baking dish with a little
water, cover and bake In a moderate
oven about one hour. Remove the co^
er the last 15 minutes and brown.
They are delicious without mush¬
rooms, or with a bit of sausage.
Walnut and Salmon Salad.
Separate into flakes one-fourth of a
cupful of canned salmon. Take one-
haif cupful of walnut meats coarsely
■hoppeck Shred three-fourths of a
^Lful of crisp. cabbage, Drain, let stand mix with In cold the
^SaMfltond v^WMiUd nuts, add one cupful of
dressing and serve on
Western Newspaper Union.
olstery Satin
V
'
\
Upholstery satin appears for eve¬
ning wear in this white and fuchsia
striped gown of intriguing cut. The
skirt follows the new line—fitted at
the waist ivith fullness from the hips
down. corsage matches the
fuchsia stripes..
Housewife's Idea Box
A* He Understood Song
Ourtis, who lias just passed this:
five-year mark, Is getting a big kie«®
out have of kindergarten. His parent
been amused at the enthusl- j
asm with which tie has entered’ inti,
the activities of the class,
though he occasionally has not fulH
understood what they were all abouM
lie likes the games and drawing Ies4
sons, but his real delight is the rnu-^
sic. Every dayjd^Jias come home
Decently singing a new he sd^^K snatches his of It.
by lusti la dl ' jSrn refrain pari^a
«
sounded but whose
were stram^^^^lsted. stngid^'. dSPC 1
“What's that you’re -jJSEI
tis?” his mother asked.
berry “Here Books,” We Go replied Around Curtis, the"' 'wllj wh™
hadn’t encountered mulberry bushes
Sun. in hi^_ W short lifetime.—New York
-A
Thejjjw L Path but to Succe»^. met^m^^^
cess. jnjffth. jjp r !U ^ is liar (I labor.—Syd¬
ney
Keeps $kin Young
Absorb blemishes and discolorations « 8 ' n 8
Mercolized Wax daily as dirccUg* Invisible
particles of aged skin are
!l ! ).><'!. he;i< ! •■. t:t' 1
fully large pores disappear. Skin
clear, velvety arid so $<
VfiUMger. M.TCOlj/UfJ \v, .
Reduces wrinkles and other uf
ply witch dissolve hazel one and ounce daily Sarolit lotion.
use at.
For Men and Women who will learn
BEAUTY CULTURE or MEN’S <4flh BARBERING.
I ait MOLER SYSTEM K i a real to<J^| stiA
m life. Earn while you learn. Write
for our FREE booklet No. 40 Vi and poH
how we can help you to a good paying Writ?
tion or a business of your own.
MOLER SYSTEM. 43i Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga,
Mouth Clear PLATES
By Mail
Roofless Si 5.00
$10.00
You take your own impression
in plaster the same as a *
dentist does.
Send S2.00 for "Impression Bite Bci jk
Money returned If you are ij&J$ not, Sfpi
satisfied when DENTyLfS you exam
MIAMI Bldg.,Mia!H^Pl
219 Shoreland
Reference: First National Bant, Midtht
Root of Happineaa
Happiness does not come from
what we have, it conies from what
we enjoy.
Liberal Commission Paid
• WANTED A MAN FAMILIAR WITH
benefit paying lodges to organize, in hij
home town or vicinity, a lodge of the Im¬
proved Order of Red Men, the oldest
purely American beneficial order. Address
H. F. STETSER, NationalSecretary
1521 W. Girard Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa.
DUTC H TULIP HI LBS. Any color. S3.35
per 100 BULB IMPORTER. \V. MARSCII-
m 42 May St.. New JtocheiJc. N. Y.
Pansy Plant n. World’s largest and most
beautiful strain. Mixed colors, 300 plants
prepaid $1. C.C. Breece, Florlst.Delaware.O.
“Bee-Less Farm Radio” $19.95. Require*
no B battery. Marvelous tone. 8<>Jter*s
Radio. 103-50 N. ItU St..Minneapolis, Mmu.