Newspaper Page Text
Tfifi CLteVEL^Nl) (GA.) COURIER
An Invitation
Dedication Ceremonies
YONAH MEMORIAL GARDENS
r» Fj Demorest, Ga
M
fj Sunday, May 26,2 p.m.
fj
rj
M
n
« The public is cordially invited to attend the
r* dedication ceremonies of beautiful Yonah
M
r* Memorial Gardens at Demorest, Ga., Sunday,
M
fj May 26, at 2 p. m.
rj
« you ;are URGED TO CONSULT our REPRESENTA¬
r* TIVE FOR WHITE COUNTY, CLARENCE BARRETT,
M
M ON FULL DETAILS OF LOTS IN THE GARDEN,
fi WHERE THE MAINTENANCE COST IN THE FUTURE
ri
r* IS BORNE BY US.
rj
M PLAN TO COME TO THE DEDICATION
l2
M CEREMONY SUNDAY AND SEE BEAUTI
r*
f* FUL YONAH MEMORIAL GARDENS
n
M
n fj L. P. WOODALL, Pres.
Got a job for
this giant killer ?
Here*s proof of the reserve strength in GMC's 370
that pays off in any operation.
j"\EEP in the pine woods, this 2%-ton
GMC, with locally added trailing
axle, wades into a pile of forest giants,
using its .power take-off to flip 1,000
pound logs onto its back. In ten minutes
it has a staggering load-and practically
no road to haul it over.
You need to subject HUB-DEEP RUTS, soft ground, down and up
may never your ravines, it totes a Herculean payload
trucks to such grueling service, but day in and day out in the timberlands
experience like this is your assurance of of North Carolina. Five trips a day, six
stamina and strength far beyond days a week the year around-and it
reserve etays a stranger to the repair shop!
normal requirements.
And the GMC 370 can be yours for hun¬ CMP money
dreds of dollars less than comparable
r GMC competitive dealer. trucks. Just check with your UlfH# MAKERS
Illustrated: From 1/2-ton to 45 tens. Gasoline and Diesel
I
. GMC 370 rated 19,BOO GVW-22,000 with optional
I ff.D, fron t a xle^206 -hp V8 or 14Mtp Six, r ~ ~ Smfx*.
• \.a*' * * w
* ~ — -
AUCTION!
CLEVELAND SAT. June 1, 2:30 P. M.
C. H. Edwards Homeplace
Here’s your chance to get some real choice
business property in Cleveland
Mood Griffin Realty k Auction Go.
Gainesville, Ga. Selling Agents u\
Office over Southern Shoe Shore Office Phone Le 2-1450 Home Le 4-40 7 4
HEALTH HINTS
By Dr. Harley D. Scantan, Prnldintj
National Chiropractic Aisoclatlon
"Tractor Back" t
And What To Do About] It
Farmers develop “tractor backs’’
because driving a tractor subjects much
one to punishment which is
like having the lower portion' of
the back battered by hundreds of
hammers. and jolting, This pounding, concentrated boun¬ in
cing, low back pain,
one sacroiliac spot, creates strain, pains between
shoulder blades, stiff neck, and
headaches. «
Farmers used to work during
daylight, about ten hours in all.
With lights on his tractor, he now
frequently works during seventeen ■ to
eighteen The hours doesn’t peak tired, sea¬
sons. tractor get
but the hours farmer does, exceeding hu¬
work beyond what the
man body can stand. while
The position of the body
one is seated on a tractor contrib¬
utes to the ultimate physical dis¬
comfort. The upper skeletal frame¬
work sags. There are nerve pres¬
sures which produce headaches,
! neckaches, and shoulder pains.
, Farmers who think "they can
take it” and ignore the limits of
their own strength and endur¬
ance, should consult their doctor
' of distressing chiropractic for relief of tne
stiffness and pain so
often encountered as a result of
: long hours seated in a strained
and tense position.
: Such precaution will make the
'work easier — relieve the conse¬
quences of the arduous work, and
j farmers can be assured of com¬
fort and well being and may thus
avoid chronic ailments in later
life as a result.
Antarctic Ice If Melted f
Would Raise Seas 90 Feet
An expedition has just returned
from Queen Maud Land, which lies
around the meridian of 20 degrees
east, where it has been trying to
determine the thickness of the ice
cap on top of the land mass which
forms the Antarctic continent.
One of its calculations is that
the amount of water bound up in
the antarctic ice cap is sufficient
to raige the world sea level at
least 90 feet.
In such an event the cities of
New York, Boston, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Washington, the Puget
sound cities, and the Los Angeles
area, except for the tallest build¬
ings would be flooded.
Not only in this country, but
complete melting of antarctio ice
would play havoc with oceanic
coastlines all over the world.
MEN
Ages 17-50
ELECTRONICS
FIELD
In The
CLEVELAND
AREA
Wages Over $100
Per Week
We will train Personnel from tliis
inmediate aiea for jobs available
! ere soon These accepted will be
trained under the supervision and
guidance of our Engineers. You
will train and work on Practical
Equipment in this locality. This
wiil he arranged that it will
not interfere with your present
employment.
3 Years Guaranteed
Plac ment Service
Upon Certification
if you wish to discuss your quali
death ns with our Personnel Rep
resent alive, till in and mail to
KLEU nr'NICS
H X 1 SS
Cleveland, (in.
Name...................Age..
Address ..... ......< .........
Occupation ....................
Working Hours................
Angina Pectoris: No Longer A Terror
“Only one generation ago,” notes an editorial in the Journal of the
American Medical Association, “the diagnosis of ‘angina pectoris’ waB
tantamount to the issuance of a death warrant.” )
medical scientists the last thirty;
years in their intensive search for
new weapons against disease is
dramatically reflected by the rad¬
ical change in the attitudes of
both laymen and doctors towards
angina — a painful heart disease.
Today, the terror with which
angina was so recently regarded knowl¬
has been replaced by the
edge that the condition can be
successfully treated. The Journal
editorial sums up the change in
thinking this way:
“The patient is more confident
and the physician both believe more that optimistic angina
because
pectoris is not a hopeless condi¬
tion.”
Properly which speaking, literally angina pain pec¬
toris, pectoral breast) means
of the (or mus¬
cle, is a term than describing the a symp¬
tom rather underlying caused
disease. The symptoms are
by a constriction of the arteries
that feed the heart muscle with
oxygen-bearing blood. The pain is
not always confined to the heart
or chest, but may be felt as
spreading shoulder, into the left arm stomach. and
neck, or upper
Medical scientists nave not yet
solved the puzzle of what causes
have this disease learned to how develop. control But they
to the
pain so that patients can lead
relatively normal have lives. Among
the drugs that made this
possible, editorial, according glyceryl to the Journal
are trinitrate
(commonly called nitroglycerine) nitre
and and pentaerythritol p tetranitrate.
The latter dru ug, which is known
to doctors as Peritrate, has been
It’s Your AMERICA
MORE TREASURED
THAN SILVER
America's GREATEST VICTORIES
AT SEA , LEO BY JOHN RAUL JONES, A
SCOTSMAN, ANO HIS&OLO CREW OF
FRENCH, IRISH, SCOTCH. PORTU¬
GUESE ANO MALAY SEA FIGHTERS
ARE A SLOWING SYMBOL OF
AMERICAN DEMOCRACY IN ACTION
uniting Different races aho
CREEDS IN A COMMON IDEAL.
He ONCE CAPTURED A BRITISH
SHIP WHOSE CARGO INCLUDED
10,000 SUITS OF CLOTHES, A
PRIZE WORTH MORE TO THE
AMERICAN CONGRESS AT THAI
TIME THAN THEIR WEIGHT IN
SILVER i The SON HOMMt menASO WAS
CHRI6TENEO BV JOHN PAUL JOI>£»
IN HONOR OF HIS <5000 FRIEND.
SEN FRANKLIN, THE EDITOR OF
NOON men ANO* ALMANAC.
BmiMt
described in a report published by
the American Medical Associa-!
tion’s Council on Pharmacy and
Chemistry effective” 6fFo/*tivo” as appearing to be the'
‘most of r \f tKa the lnnnp.aatinas long-acting;
nitrates. Nitrates are salts whicR
have been widely used for their! I
dilating effect on the arteries. .
The success doctors have
achieved in both relieving and
preventing strides that anginal pain and the
better are being made to¬ 1
ward understanding of ar.
terial disease both promise signif- 1
icant new achievements against
angina pectoris in the near fu-!
ture.
“Thirty years hence,” the Jour- 1
nal editorial predicts, “it is likely
that enzymes, hormones, and other
perhaps yet unidentified biochem-| pec-j
ical agents will make angina
toris a truly rare condition.”