Newspaper Page Text
. GA, JtU U. 1M
gRA VETP«B*CT5COOOQM*IL
TEAR
i n usually Itfl* «f T*W
' ZretHaH. tax
jTor Uli Owner*.
By ZACK P. t»*™
( nminteiloxr ol Cun an* «»b. tar
G. N. 8.
Our quail sheering Wends are un-
uimous and very enthusiastic in
•heir reports that there are more
quail i airing ctt this year than any
• ear tor the past five or six. I have
been asked time and again what
accounts for the increase.
This is a hard question to anwser,
bui I believe it is due in part to
a shortage of bird dogs ast year.
Then too. the Department made a
desperate effort to stop the boot
legging df the game birds. And. last
but not least, I am thoroughly con
vinced tha< the people are «>-operat-
ins- more in conserving our game
than they hove been in several years
' t'was in Southwest Georgia this
week, going from Hawklnsv.lle, Con
dole, Albany. Camilla and bade
through Tifton. Douglas and then in
!o Appling and Jeff Davis counties.
The reports arc very encouraging,
t ots cf our friends advise that they
have already seen single conveys of
the young birds and as a 'ule there
were some twelve to eighteen in
each covey. This is rather large and
Is due in part I believe, to the good
weather in those sections.
I am prepared to say that I be
lieve it will be possible for us to
organize the fanners whereby we
can secure people to shoot their birds
and pay them a reasonable fee for
the privilege and at the same time
board in their homes, hire them or
their sons as guides, and use Mr
conveyances, such as horses, mules
and in some instances wagons, for
the purpose of transportation through
the farm lands and woodlands.
When we can get a program like
this completed I will venture it will
mean no less thnn $5O,0O0,00i).(H) an
nually to the Georgia fanner.
VEtV LAKEWOtJD CHtTBCB
PLANNED FOB IBeBBAFEB
(By O. N. 8.)
Atlanta, na —Opening of head
quarters for the building fund of
the Rev H. E. McBrayer's new inter-
dennmii.ational church in Lakewood
Heights has been announced by
sponsors of the church, most of
whom arc former members of the
Lakewood Heights Methodist church
of which Rev. Mr. McBrayer was
" plans for the new church were
made known last week, just before
McBrayer*. resignation from thd
Methodist church. He had been
found guilty by a Jury of Methodist
ministers of “gross imprudence and
conduct unbecoming a minister"
when tried on charges growing out
of his advocacy of repeal during the
recent referendum campaign.
FOR SALE—Bed ream stdte of
modern Walnut—Cheep fae cam-
Mrs. J. L. Sibley.
EROSION HAS DESTROYED
TWRTT-nVE MLUON ACRES
OF FARM LADD IN U S.
TAX-FREE COTTON PATERS TO
BE ON THE, CORD SAYS
Three billion tons of soil material
e being washed out of this country
and into the surrounding oceans
every year. Yearly damages from
this devastating soil erosion total
ore than $400,000,000.
According to estimates of the fed-
al soil erosion rervice. more than
33,000,000 acred of good farm land
have been ruined fcr farming pur
poses by this erosion of the soil since
America was first settled by the
early colonists. This is an ai
greater than the state of Illinois.
An adilitier.&l 125,000,000 aci
now in cultivatic. are rapidly being
washed oviay, soil experts claim.
This land will eventually be ruined
unless some wa> is found to pre
vent crcfion.
Plains Vulnerable
Soil cros ! cn is net confined to hilly
or i*vm»tafnou3 regions, the federal
experts say, but is just as general
on li e | lain*: and the sloping lands
of the com It It. The Mississippi
- alone is said to wash enough
rich scil into the Gulf ol Mexico
.f-I* m k..ild more thaml.200
;s c.f ICO ecres etch, having
depth n? soil that .-s twice that of
the M d&k'c ;ir‘.»unl surface soil.
While soil erosion has been a n
ace to American agriculture for
years, only recently has anything
been done to prevent it The prob
lem has now become so serious that
the federal government is taking
active part in ending this waste. A‘
present 40 projects are being carrir
to determine the relation effici-
esney of different control methods
and to devise better ones.
for OLBMIi
*u*s«.nATiMa
Accurali Value
J.C. GRATN CO.
JEWELERS
MiDedfevile, Ga.
Farmers of the cotton belt are as
sured by C. A. Cobb, farm adminis
tration cotton chie£. they will reveive
quota tax-exemption pertificateg
under the Bankhead act before their
cotton is reday to gin.
••We promised them to the farm
's’ before ginning time, and they
ill get them,” Cobb said.
This was AAA’s answer to expres
sions of fear in fome sections of the
cotton belt that delay in distribut
ing the tax-exemption paper, cov
ering production within quotas of
individual farmers, might result in
repetition of the confusion caused
last year when the certificate* ar
rived late.
Cobb said all the exemption papers
already had been sent from Wash
ington to the control organizations
the various states, an<r that they
re in the hands of producers in
as with e arly harvest.
WANTED—Man with car. Route ex
perience preferred tot not n 4
sary. Opening new In Washington
county. MUlwtgevttlo. Rawletfh.
Dept. GAG-2*4 MD. Mem
Tenn. Write or see L. M. IMgby.
Mllledfeville. Go. 7-1-25 4k
PINE MOUNTAIN VALLEY
PROJECT OPENED JULY 4;
TWO FAMILIES MOVE IN
(By G. N. S.)
Independence Day, 1935, marked
the beginning of economic freedom
for the first of 300 families who
will occupy and cultivate the fed
eral government’s Pine Mountain
Valley project.
Formal dedication of the one-mil-
lion-dollar project, covering 11.000
acres in Middle Georgia, not far
from the Little White House, took
place on July 4. On the same day
two Atlanta families moved into
their new homes in Pine Mountain
Valley. Heads of these families,
Walter Byers and Guy Blockstock,
had been at work on the project
since it got under way February 4.
There are 50C men ai work in the
valley now and 125 are settlers who
eventually will bring their families
to live there.
POLITICAL CARDS
To the people of Milledgevllle:
I am a candidate for Mayor, sub
ject to the Democratic Primary to
be held August 2nd, next. Your sup
port and influence is respectfully
requested.
GEORGE S. CARPENTER
I wish to announce my candidacy
■for re-election as Alderman of the
City of Milledgevllle, subject to the
Democratic Primary of August 2nd,
1935.
T. H. CLARK
1 am a candidate for re-election
as an Alderman of the City of Mil-
ledgeville, subject to the Democra
tic Primary to be held on August
2nd, 1935.
T. B. DUMAS
I beg to announce my candidacy
for re-election as Alderman, subject
to the City Democratic Primary of
August 2nd, 1935.
J. C. BASTON
Get Rid of Poisons
A olaandng laxative—purely vege
table Black-Draught—la the r.-et
thought of thoaaands of men and
women who have found that by re
storing the downward movement of
the bowels many dlmgreeable symp
toms of constipation promptly can
be relieved . . Mr. J. P. Mahaffey,
of Clinton, B. C, writes: ”1 have
found that Black-Draught Is very
effective in the cleansing of the sys
tem. When affected by the dull
headache, the drowsiness and lassi
tude caused by constipation, I take
Black-Draught.”
CITATION
GEORGIA, Baldwin County
To Whom It May Concern-
J. H. Simmons, as administrator
of the estate of B. D. Simmons, de
ceased, having applied to me for left
to sell flour shares of the capital
stock of Exchange Bank of MiHedge-
ville, Georgia, evidenced by stock
certificate number sixty-one. issued
by that bank, for the purpose of
making distribution among the heirs
of said deceased, the heirs at law
and creditors of said deceased, and
all persons concerned are notified
that said application will be heard
before the Court of Ordinary of said
county, on the first Monday in Au
gust. 1935. Let all persons show cause
at that time why raid application
should not be granted.
This July 1, 1935.
BERTIE B. STEMBRIDGE
Ordinary, Baldwin Co. Ga.
BLACK
DRAUGHT
NOTICE TO SCHOOL PATRONS
Notice is hereby given that the
Baldwin County Board of Education
will meet on Tuesday, August 6,
1935, at 2:00 P M.. for tl e purpose
of fixing School Bus ROtites for
1935-36.
\11 persons desiring to change bus
routes must appear at this rr.reting,
BOSTON CAFE
“WHERE EVERYBODY EATS".
Delicious Western Seals and Sea Footfc
For E C O N O M Y
and CONVENIENCE
...FOR A TAXI
r CALL ]
£3513
OR IF YOU PREFER A U-DRIVklT FOR THE DATE OR
SUNDAY AFTERNOON RIDE. YOU MAY HIRE OfC AT
REASONABLE RATES FROM—
THE SOUTHLAND GARAGE
COOK AS YOU LIGHT..
The speed, cleanliness and convenience
which make electric light a necessity
now bring like advantages to cooking
How would you like to have your cooking sim
plified as electricity modernized your lighting?
You can have every modem cooking convenience
with a new Hotpoint Electric Range. This en
ables you to cook with heat that is measured with
the accuracy of electricity. No longer need sum
mer mean a hot, sweltering kitchen—insulation
keeps the heat inside the oven.
And with an electric range, there is no smoke
—no fumes. You cook with wood stove economy.
Come to our store. See for yourself how far cook
ing methods have advanced in economy of time,
effort, and money.
GEORGIA
POWER COMPANY
Water Heater
This UttoHv Hitpiit Aw
tMulk Electric Wafer Heat
er. Uawatched aad —lea M
it provide* aa atoriaet Mg-
ply af hot wafer every hear
af the day mad eight. As laag
u 3 year* to pay.
,o changes can be made after
contracts are let.
BALDWIN COUNTY BOARD OF
EDUCATION
By R. W. IVEY, President
P. N. BIVINS, C. S. S.
TEACHER’S EXAMINATION
Examination for State certificates
will be given in the ofifee of the
State Superintendent of Schools, in
Atlanta on Saturday, August 3, 1935,
beginning at 10:00 o’clock A. M.
Examination for teachers for coun
ty license*, or for renewal of first
grade County licenses, or for the re
newal of State certificate*, will be
held at Georgia Military Colelge on
Saturday, August 3, 1935, at 9:00
o’clock.
All leaciiei* who do not hold
certificates or licenses and expect
to t.-ach in this county next year
will take due notice and govern
themselves accordingly.
P. N. BIVINS* C. S. S.,
. Baldwin Oounty. Georgi*
We are Prepared lo Take Care of Your Dairy PrtxkacU
Cream. Sweet Milk, Butter Milk and Butter
Also Yo„. Fresh Meats
PHONE 13 AND SAVE MONEY
Montgomery*>
Milk Depot and Meat Market
Keeps you on top
of your job „
—ilk— ol waUe It ■«*" o»y uaotu
tie pease that refreshes ■ ■ * Y°a
bodTto worit El owl ready ° ha*
■tart. k halpa yoy a - iktags -f—T Yoer
daalar cwi repair y®«.
' N roun itf*
Sajr’N CocwCatalsa .hsluia. Al.tWataaalwa*'
iS^ li u.,8..-tap—-ari8 a~-
Milledgeville Coca-Cola
Bottling Company
I