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Here’s good news for you people
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Liquid and Effames tent Tablets
Citation
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY:
Court of Ordinary; At Chamber:?,
January 7th, 1935.
To All Whom It May Concern:
C. T. Powell, Guardian of the Estate
Augustus Castleberry, having fi'od
plication for letters of dismission from
said Guardianship, the heirs, the n. xt of
kin of Augustus Castleberry and
and all interested persons are hereby
required to show cause, if any they can
why the application of the said G. T.
Powell should not be granted,
me as Ordinary in my office at
Courthouse in Trenton, said state and
county, at the February Term of
court at 10 o’clock A. M., February
19S5.
Given under my hand and official
nature this 7th day January, 1935.
W. T. McCauley, 0)dinary.
Renew jour Subscription.
b Printing
See Us
DADE COUNTY TIMES: JANUARY 31, 1935.
j
r\LESSINGS on the person who
^ rN reminds us of a succulent
dish which we can serve as
the piece de resistance of a din¬
ner. Have you thought recently
of having scalloped oysters play
that part. They are not only very
good, but very good for you. And
so as not to make this suggestion
a half way measure, here is one
for the rest of the dinner to serve
with that popular dish.
Scalloped Oysters (>0c
linked l imn Beans Fhf
Bread and Batter 12<f
C.abbnfic , Celery and Apple
Salad 1 bo
Shredded Wheat Fruit
Pudding 3.>C
Demi-Tasse ;>C
This dinner will cost you ap¬
proximately a dollar and a half—
twenty-five cents per person -and
here are the recipes for the beans
ami pudding:
linked Lima Beans: Dice two
slices bacon, fry till crisp, add
COULTER, FUNER-1L HOME
Ideal Service it Mddecate- erate Cos* Cosier A
Start the New Year Right by
Paying up your Subscription ! !
I umniiiniiiiiiimiiiiiiiii iiimiiiii!iininiiiiiiiM HniiimimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiM...ui t 1
two tablespoons diced canned
pimiento and the contents of a
No. 2 can lima beans. Season
with salt and pepper, and turn in
a baking dish. Hake about thirty
minutes in a moderate oven.
Shredded Wheat Fruit Pudding:
Melt three tablespoons butter in
skillet, add three crumbled shred¬
ded wheat biscuits and stir until
evenly mixed with the butter.
Mix two-tliirds cup sugar, one-half
teaspoon cinnamon and a few
grains salt, and add. Have the
drained fruit from a No. 2 can
apricots cut in quarters and two
bananas sliced. Put a layer of
crumbs in a buttered baking dish,
and cover with half the apricots
and bananas. Add another layer
of crumbs and then tiie rest of
the fruit. Top with the rest of
the crumby combine one-third cup
of tiie apricot syrup with one
tablespoon lemon juice, and pour
over. Bake for about forty
minutes in a moderate — 375°
oven. Serve warm with top milk
or with half milk and half cream.*
AOS. Will IF! I.
B ANKERS* STORY
American Bankers Association
President Announces Move
to Stimulate Newspaper
Advertising
NEW YORK.—Plans for stimulating
wider use ol informative newspaper
advertising by banks in promoting pub
lie understanding and confidence in re
gar(l to existing banking conditions
and methods have been announced by
It. S. Heeht, President ot the American
Bankers Association, as a part of his
organization’s activities in aid of bus!
ness recovery.
A general groundwork was prepared
through a nationwide survey of adver¬
tising by banks relative to their will¬
ingness to extend justifiable loans to
industry and trade. Tbit. he said, re¬
vealed that a large number in all parte
of the country are pursuing aggressive
policies along this line and encourag
ing their customers to develop forward
looking business plans "It is our aim to
aid in fostering this constructive atti¬
tude whenever possible,” he said.
Hie Theme of New Advertising
The association's Advertising De
partment, under the direct supervision
of the general executive officers, has
prepared, at tne headquarters In New
York City, an informative advertising
series for the use of member banks in
the association to aid them in develop
ing in their own communities better
general public understanding regard
ing banking, Mr. Heeht said.
"The underlying theme of this adver
ttsing is that sound banking is based on
helpful human relations and that it has
a unity of interest with the people ot
its community which binds them to¬
gether with a common purpose,” he
said.
"We are confident that if a clear tin
derstanding of this is brought home to
the people in all our banking communi¬
ties, it will go far in restoring the pub¬
lic confidence which good banking de¬
serves. A bank in which people de¬
servedly believe is doubly safe, it is to
the public interest for the people to
have confidence in their banks.
The Place of Advertising
“We feel that bank advertising has a
special public duty to perform in this
connection under existing conditions.
The copy which will be supplied in the
service we have developed will not only
aid the individual bank in promoting
the use of its own facilities but is also
aimed to bring about with the aid of
newspaper advertising a clearer public
viewpoint regarding the essential part
it occupies in the life of its communi
ty.”
Mr. Heeht emphasized in regard to
the new advertising facilities being of¬
fered to the members of the association
that they are not a profit making ven
ture and that there is no intention to
disturb existing advertising arrange¬
ments, the idea being that these insti
tuti nal services shall supplement
rather than replace present plans, or
that they will give assistance to mem
her banks now lacking satisfactory ar¬
rangements.
MANY BANKS LONG LIVED
In the United States—
168 Banks over 100 years old.
2,472 Banks over 50 years old.
10,391 Banks over 25 years old.
There are in the United States 168
banks that have been in continuous ex¬
istence for more than one hundred
years. There are 2,472 banks over fifty
years old, while 64% of all the banks in
this country, or 10,391, are twenty-five
years old or older.
In other words, practically two-thirds
of the banks in tiiis country have come
through several successive periods of
depression and panic, including 1907.
1914, 1920 and 1929-33.
The Oldest Bank
The oldest bank in the country, which
is in Boston, was chartered February
17, 1784.
In the 64% ot banks that are twen
ty-five years old or older is lodged
a major portion of the banking re
sources of the nation, in commenting
recently upon the stability of a great
majority of the banks in the United
States. Dr. Harold Stonier, Educational
Director of the American Bankers As¬
sociation, said:
“The fact that we have so many
banks that nave been in existence a
long period of years is an eloquent
tribute to the genius of American man¬
agerial ability, for no other country
has experienced such wild gambling
eras and resultant periods of business
stagnation as those through which our
country has passed at frequent inter¬
vals during the past century.”
Job Printing- The
Kind You WANT
WHEN You Y
Want it.
Pictures from Everywhere
By Telegraph
- - Almost Instantly!
WIREPHOTOS
will appear exclusively in
THE
ATLANTA
JOURNAL
It is the journalistic Miracle of the Age—this new meth¬
od of transmitting pictures over the 10,000-mile trans-
continential network of Associated Press wires.
The pictures come right along with the telegraphic
story of important news happenings from all over Am¬
erica—and by cable from foreign countries, too.
Starting in The Atlanta Journal
Tuesday, January 1st
No other newspaper within a radius of 700 miles
has the new A-P Wirephoto service.
A National
Problem
r_ PHE biggest and most im¬
portant Annual Convention
ever held by the National
Canners Association will be held
in Chicago during the week be¬
ginning January thirteenth to¬
gether with the Conventions of
the Canning Machinery and Sup¬
plies Association and the National
Food Brokers Association. There
will be canners there from every
State in the Union and even some
from foreign countries who will
come to learn how we are solving
our national problem.
For the subject which will
dominate the Convention is noth¬
ing less than a national problem.
How shall we best make known
to the millions of housewives who
buy them, both here and abroad,
the nature of the contents of that
opaque object known as a tin can?
Shall we reduce all canned foods
to three dead levels by labelling
them respectively A, B and C, or
shall we describe them to the best
of our ability and keep on produc¬
ing the superior qualities of foods
that are now put up in cans?
A Golden Opportunity
The eternal effort to devise new
ways to can better and still better
foods and to exchange full infor¬
mation on these new ways, which
is the main object of these Annual
Conventions, will be kept up, but
many of these inventions will be
forced into the discard, if the can¬
ners are forced to conform to
three arbitrary grades.
This meeting will afford a
golden opportunity for the Con¬
vention to make known to the
public the reasons why as com¬
plete a description as possible of
the food 1 * within it should be
printed on each and every can.
The exhibits of the can manu¬
facturers. canners and canning
machinery manufacturers wili oc¬
cupy three large hails in the Ste
yens Hotel.*
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 tead 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 pleased to be able to offer the
Brisbane column as a regular feature
of this paper You will enjoy it and
find it full of valuable information.
666 C Checks OLDS
Liquid - Tablest And
Salve - Nose Drops FEVER
First day
Headaches ^ 30 Mln, "' !
Citation
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY:
Court of Ordinary; January Term, 1935
To All Whom it May Conc-rn:
J. M. C. Townsend having applied
for Guardianship of person and proper¬
ty of Augustus Castleberry, Insane, his
heirs and next of kin and hereby gives
notice that this application will be
heard at my office at 10 o’clock A. M..
on the first Monday in February, 1935
This 7th day of January, 1935.
W T. McCauley, Ordinary.
The Times
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