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« MMjOHSOHMACAZINESN<
-w,'
" k EDWIN
mm
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V V>;;. A’,' '4 *
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“Mr'v;*)'d
7fi see 1
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|L' rtrkTof enduring love...of desperate sd-
'enture...of heroic effort...as the world
end the billions of creatures that teem upon
its surface are smashed into oblivion.
THE MOST AMAZING STORY IN YEARS
It is to be published serially in these columns... do not
miss the opening installments.
DADE COUN' DECEMBER 20, 1934
‘News
kuByron
. Ala.,
■*- ■‘’• tanooca '
/A, Gil'reath have
tu| ? ? ‘home In
°°^ 'j ^‘tiding several
with Mr. and Mrs. William
Mr. and Mrs. Claud
Mrs. Joe Phillips and Sons
and Wilburn, Mrs. Lucile
and daughter Christine,
Sunday afternoon with Miss
t uue Beckham and father.
Mrs. Will Campbell spent
day with her mother Mrs. P.
Bible.
Sj^ ■’ y Mlis Blevins Ijpa#*- from
»
*'i^WSW® J »#vins Salurday.
Q iite a few from this plac >
tende I the play Monday night
Rising Fawn.
Miss Hazel Amos, Mr-. F.
Walraven spent Saturday
noon with Miss Gertrude
ham.
Mr. and Mrs. Cicero
and son spent Sunday with
and Mrs. Byron Forester.
Mr. and Mrs. Ra'ph
from Cave Springs, called on
mother Sunday Mrs. John
ter.
YOUR EYES
they guide you from the path of
danger, and they help you ta
EARN
your living____provide food and
shelter for yourself and
YOUR
family-.corr, ct’y prescribed glass
es mean better work and more
WAGES
from a business standpoint, if for
no other reason, protect your eyes
Harris & Hogshead
OPTOMETRISTS
For Appointments Call 6-7545
Chattanooga, Tennessee
(13 E. Eighth Street)
hma River Notes
when tile {
M•».. winn
Mr. and »talvi*y '
were called tcwffistal her’? home*
because of his serious il ness
The Christmas } ro ram at our
church will be ,, onday n i g b t
Dec. 24th at sevei o’clock. Lels
all come out.
Mr. and Mrs. Holsomback were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Forester.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Riddle
and liUle daughter are visiting
Mr. and iVIrs. W. R Riddle.
Mr. and Mrs. Cushion of Fori
Pays e, Ala., were Sunday guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Canova Guinn.
Miss Zula Mae Tumlin^nd Allie
St-ay were week end guests of Mi's.
Eldie While.
Asa Reeves and Hendrick Aber
crombie visited in Rising Fawn,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ball of Co¬
lumbus, were here Saturday, Miss
Ethel Williams returned home
with them.
Mr. Balk P well was Sunday
gu«t of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Reeves.
Paul Forest r lias returned home
after visiting in Chaltanooga.
The sick of our community s
improving.
Little Mabt I Bradford is visit,
ing her grandparents at Clover
dale Mr. and Mrs. Bill Amos.
Mr. Jim Bradford is visiting
relatives here.
SEASONS GREETINGS
1934
Send
That
Check
Christmas
Next W e e k
Christmas Seal Honors "Father of Sanatorium Movement
>itt 1075 A HEW YORK DOCTOR AND T3 '
SPORTSMAN, SUFFERING FROM TUBERCULOSIS,7HEN
CONSIDERED INCURABLE, die'. DECIDED TO GO TO T HE
Aoirondac ks to But while hunting he noticed
THAT AFTER. SITTING BESIDE TRAILS WAITING FOR GAME
HE FELT RESTED. UPON THIS ' REST CURE ' HE FOUNDED f
THE MODERN PISEASE.-ANP TREATMENT HE LIVED FOR THE TO DREADED BE 67 / Livingston tOWASD
'-An One
k EXCELLENT CMJCUCNI ATHLETE HIMLCICi of mankinds
lj Trudeau got the fir5t warnings Greatest benefactors.
f “THAT HE WAS A'T.B." AFTER A WALK-
f ING MATCH. HE WAS THOROUGHLV
EXHAUSTED AND DEVELOPED A COLD
ABCESS.- But THE SIGNIF/CANCE OF
IIS AS A SYNPTOM OF TUBERCULOSIS
WAS NOT REALIZED IN THOSE DAYS.
Sroo^^
A INSISTED FELLOW ON PHYSICIAN TAKING /-JgpJ vl TlNV HI COTTAGE S -- WAS^w^JSs.. y RrXflgllb. N
HIS TEMPERATURE- THE START OF His GREAT SANA¬
-■IT WAS lOl.' / / | Ui TORIUM AT SARANAC. IT IS
Further examina- (p [ . KNOWN AS'THE LITTLE REO"
TION SHOWEO THAT % OF \ r AND IS THE PIONEER COTTAGE
HIS LEFT lung was involved IN THE DEVELOPEMENT OF
SANATORIUM TREATMENT IN AMERICA
.GGDlUKslI
GUS HOME
uy kraut!
&35kas. survjvpd
you re'nfuTwhhn boys in
kliaki were kissing their girls
good-bye, flags were waving, and
if w r anted to go home and eat
a quiet dish of sauerkraut you
had a guilty conscience even if
you called it by its war-time nom
de plume—Liberty Cabbage?
Cabbage Carries On
And in more recent days, with
the effects of the drought stiil
with us, Lave you sometimes
wondered how the cabbage would
fare, and how you would fare
without an occasional dish of
sauerkraut? Well, cabbage is a
sturdy vegetable, and enough of
it has come through to assure us
that our frankfurters will not be
lonesome, nor our health diets
l^^yng alone survive, for sauerkraut. If the fit
sauerkraut is most
But don’t think of it as a boon
companion alone for such foods as
frankfurters and pig’s feet. There
are countless ways to serve this
delicious health food, and some of
them are designed to please per¬
sons who go on a much lighter
diet than these meats suggest.
Here is a sauerkraut dish which
will make you forget wars and
droughts. It is a nice luncheon
main dish when served with crisp
bacon slices.
A Tested Recipe
Creamed Sauerkraut: Saute
three tablespoons sliced onions and
four tablespoons green pepper in
three tablespoons fat until the
onions become pale yellow. Add
thi’ee tablespoons flour, and stir
until smooth. Add two cups of
milk slowly, stirring until thick
and creamy. Season to taste with
salt and pepper, add two cups
canned sauerkraut and heat thor¬
oughly. This serves six persons.’ 1 '
j
-
Is Interest on Bo ds Right,?
Has the Insurance Bus i ess
produced a Do'lar's Worth
Wealth?
— Is it Right for One Man to
$50 for an Hour’s Labor
Another Man Gets Half a
or Less?
-READ--
AFTER THE TRUTH
By C. Y. Allen
little book fil'ed with interest¬
comment of present day so¬
a,.d moial problems. It
be read by every citizen or
United States.
Postpaid, Only 50c
\ Ptg. Co., Beaver Dam,
Pop! Pop! Pop!
A LL sorts of blissful things
happen during the holidays
——all the way from popping
»/|» c.j!"s^<)>4o popping corn. We
A • *ve no recipe for pr-jjing the
r quest-on. Sometimes it pops it¬
self almost automatically. But
popcorn doesn’t do that. It must
be dry and yet contain exactly
enough water to turn into steam,
when heated. That’s why it’s a
good plan to buy it in cans. But
we hare some mighty good re-
cipes for popcorn after it is
popped. The first one is called
most appropriately and
Popcorn Bliss: Cook one
a half cups sugar, one-third cup
water and one-fourth cup corn
syrup to 244 degrees. Beat one
egg white until stiff, add hot
syrup very slowly, beating con¬
stantly', and continue beating un¬
til it loses its gloss. Add three-
fourths cup chopped popcorn (be¬
ing sure to remove all hard ker¬
nels), and pour into a buttered
plate. Cut in squares. This makes
three quarters of a pound.
Balls and Marbles
Ball* and marbles are appropri¬
ate for the holidays. Here are
recipes for making them.
Popcorn and Puffed Wheat
Balls: Boil one cup molasses and
one-half cup dark corn syrup to
2G0 degrees. Add one tablespoon
butter and a pinch of soda, and
pour over one quart of freshly-
popped corn mixed with one and
a half cups puffed wheat. Mix
well and form into balls with the
hands. This makes about twenty-
four medium balls.
Popcorn Cheese Marbles: Mix
one-lmlf cup very finely ground
popped corn with one-half cup
grated cheese and a few grains of
salt, and moisten with mayon¬
naise Form into small balls or
marbles. Roll in some ' more
ground popped corn, and chill in
tile refrigerator. Serve "with sal¬
ads. Tills makes eight marbles.*
Now a Regular Feature of
This Paper.. A Column by
ARTHUR
BRISBANE
The Highest Paid Editor
in the World
Mr. Brisbane’s writings are more
widely read than those of any
other editor of the present day.
To read what he has to say in
his interpretative column, ‘ This
Week,” is to keep in touch with
a fast moving world.
Mr Brisbane writes in a simple
but striking style and in his com¬
ments on current events he dis¬
plays an intimate knowledge of
the widest possible range of sub¬
jects, as well as the word mastery
for which he is justly famous.
We are pleated to be able to offer the
Brisbane column as 0 regular feature
of this paper. You tvilt enjoy it and
find it fall of valuable information.