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Alaskan Pelts Are Up 15
Per Cent Over Year Ago
St. Louis.—More than 20,000 pelts,
; mostly Alaskan seal, representing
■ the entire seasonal catch of hunters
•in Alaskan island preserves, sold
I here at prices from 15 to 20 per
■ cent higher than a year ago.
i The auctions are held semi-an
' nually by the Fouke Fur company
under supervision of the United
States government.
! Receipts from the fall sale totaled
i $610,310. Seal skins brought an aver-
I age price of S3O. Fox skins brought
1 about $25 each. Three sea otter
’ skins, confiscated from hunters who
•' had violated the closed season,
I brought prices ranging from $6.50
; to $125.
Seventy per cent of the receipts of
; the sale goes to the federal govern
ment. The balance is divided equal
i ly between Canada and Japan.
I After 20 Years, He Gets
to Say, “I Told You So”
! Salt Lake City.—Locksmith Jack
[ Flowers uses forethought. Twenty
I years ago he made a key for a safe
1 at Fort Douglas. He was called on
• for it recently, and produced it.
' “I knew you’d lose that Ley some
J day,” he said. “Here’s an extra
I one.”
Blue Nile’s Origin
Lake Tana, about one-eighth the
size of Lake Erie, gives rise to the
Blue Nile river, which, joining the
White Nile at Khartoum in the
Sudan, furnishes, in its overflow, the
needed irrigation water and rich
silt for coaxing river valley areas
in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and
Eevot into flower.
Siloes Always rm. cnanr
Well-fitting shoes were a -token
of good breeding in Athens and
much attention was paid to foot
wear. Sandals laced over the in
step were put on when leaving the
house. Theophrastus says that
mended shoes were a sign of ava
rice, and overlarge or nailed shoes
were boorish except for milt ary
wear.
checks
666 C °- DS
FEVER
Liquid-Tablets first d
Salve-Nose „ , , -: „.
Drops Headache, 30 Min
Try “Rub-My-Tism”-World’s Best
Liniment.
Dr. Edwin D. Gray
Dentist
Over McGinnis Drug Store.
Summerville, Ga.
Laxative combination
folks know is trustworthy
The confidence thousands of par
ents have in good, old reliable, pow
dered Thedford’s Black-Draught has
prompted them to get the new Syrup
of Black-Draught for their children.
The grown folks stick to the pow
dered Black-Draught; the youngsters
probably will prefer it when they
outgrow their childish love of sweets.
Mrs. C. W. Adams, of Murray, Ky.,
writes: “I have used Thedford’s
Black-Draught (powder) about thir
teen years, taking it for biliousness.
Black-Draught acts well and I am
always pleased with the results. I
wanted a good, reliable laxative for
my children. I have found Syrup of
Black-Draught to be just that.”
BLACK-DRAUGHT
OUR PUZZLE CORNER
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Copyright 1936. Lincoln Newspaper Featuraa, Inc. f M W>y\ | | "/// [
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THPCETTZPS f yMS
A/vDSEZ WHAT k'4raw-Fl </’ l\ O OBJECTS
CM W§|F s '&%£. ..
“OUT OF THE RED”
The national income for the 1936
calendar year will probably equal
the income paid out for the first
time since 1929, according to the
annual report of Secretary of Com
merce Roper, who estimates the total
at about $60,0061,0'00,000 and declares
that business, as a whole, is “out of
the red.” Three significant features
are cited Iby the secretary, including
an increase in the output of durable
goods, in the production of non-dur
able goods and the absence of a ma
jor setback at any time.
TRY OUR JOB PRINTING
DETECTIVE -RILEY * By Richard Lee ‘ I
t— ■■ ■■■■ -■ ...... ■ „ ... - , —lj
I’LL LOOK INTO YOUR RUSH THE? SEATTLE HE A DOU APTERS
feSF I » ffl >777-/ W a MESSAGE...
(II ■
07 ( YOU put EE | JI V W'T? Z V LE > J 7 * For WATln>j A
< \£ C HOOSE glow/ f /// Glt OF if'
HTJa ■ '“7 Rrw. MW v
7 7 k 'fl 9/ ) tt MN Wm >. ' II
r’j\. 1936, Lincoln Newspaper Features, Inc. L———L———l—l —.—.~
FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW!.'! B y H.T.E^ o
I J!) % *1 I
77 J. MONUMENT y•- _
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JmK* of//, - )L_imn T“- ml S / H
K&a| ffia / ■“ im oossstooif
'X a/// ..Li
05 Ik JHwc.yS-, ' ' ) M\MK6 KH.U CHICKENS
If 1 V
— -
~ It wwoTWe last word in mens’ - ■ ■
FASHION IN ENGLAND,DORIN6 QUEEN ZS>
u/ac piexrr euzabeth’s reign, for men t& stuff „ me 0,0 ./Sb w vomen welcome
MADE Rv TUF AMriCMTPirtco/rzAate TREIR HOGE WITH RAGS, SO THEIR UECS Their house-guests
made By -me ancient Phoeviciwz appeared enormously fat some wth in\ &< POURING
treRE -WAN YRS. AGO !!! OF-mesE PDDDED LEGS WERE TO S PERFUNIE
OVEB a FOOT IN DIAMETfc-Rl!! the heads of
OBI
" TURKESTSw II ‘I r AS A SVMBOU •
Copyrljbl 1136, Lincoln N.w.p.por Faatoraa, Ina. ' ,jl I w ' i
d DASH DIXON - By Pean
WWO GIANTS WATCH DOT, I UNAWARE OF ANV DANGER, FWE'VE Will 1 ' I'7]?' O OASH , LOOKS W
DASH, AND THE DOCTOR AS THEY PONDER THEIR FATE? EVERYTHING. z NOW GlAfaT<Z// JU
THEY LOOR OVER THE WRECKED! HF OUR ONLY WE'RE ALL SET.' ud4 f
i SPACE SHIP AFTER THE CRASH f NOW IS TO FIND MY | SHE
ON THE ra©®m PD F DAUGHTER? WE'LL TARE 1 7 -.._-- J .aflr^ WAS HEPE
I ALONG OUR RAY GUNS j JUST A MINUTE J
IrCOME, ALEX, WE lliiH I AND ENOUGH FOOD TO LAST J
must capture La couple of months ?J
■ > y S THEY BE ABLE
. Yj'jZZa V '' TO-ESCAPE THESE _
IZnVZZW XT G» GIANT MOON men ?p
I/’ >L T7T...1 E!— Z >/.Hn . " « —1
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1937.
25,200 PROJECTS.
The PWA reports that 25,200 proj
ects, costing $4,071,750,926, have
been aided by the PWA. The total
given includes the contributions of
sponsors as well as the government
aid. Local communities have contrib
uted heavily to the cost of certain
non-federal projects to which the
PWA has allotted $742,500,0001 out
of a cost of around $2,175,000,000.
The PWA has been responsible for
about three-fourths of the schools
and two-thirds of the hospitals built
within the last three years. It has
also aided 3,078 utility projects, 4,700
buildings, ninety-six flood projects,
896 highway projects and 271 engi
neering structures.
NOTICE—PUBLIC SALE.
Public sale, six miles south of
Menlo, Ga., at Mrs. Pat Alleys, on
road from Jamestown, Ala., to Berea
church, at 10 a.m., Jan. 9, 1937:
We will sell to highest bidder for
cash: farming tools of all kinds, one
good two-horse wagon, 300 bushels
good corn, 1,500 bundles fodder, all
household goods, fifteen bushels
sweet potatoes, twenty bushels Irish
potatoes, and many other things too
numerous to mention.
LAUGHS FROM THE DAY’S NEWS!
"H GoT fl SflTrtTuS A /ZTX. ///, V7l
FOP SDUE? 1 Q)<1) he| •y I
SiKSGWG- irt THE bathtub is V)P>PTA J ‘ Jj
P, HIGHLY HAB'T wXA |
NWkH ACTVALLy IMPROVES THE" ' V Z/V/
TOUE CP OWE'S NOICE, J-Q / ///
SAYS NOTED PROFESSOR. .£g /z 'wj
mews item:- / p ° 1 >■
( A LIU- more ) CJ3 f J A ( V/»Thout P) BATHTUB T4»S A
I PPACTIte A lc v ,J Z, ) Z APARTMENT 15 <l3s°- A<
, 1 e Q MOUTH, VJITH A BATHTUB/
RS Ivol) 'SWEEI' \ITS 1 ISSV Month’./
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6jX r '£} (T J ? A G°l9
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M (k i
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! //.\ ( you STICK TO ZOUfZ ) Fo g I'm TOST
Ptsfo ? LES SOMS_X ?,( a vagabond/—- -
L else — *t ?> j lcajer — S .o>
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"7 f.^ right 1936? Lincoln" Nawpwpgt FxiufO, Inc ■» x 1 **** 1t 1 V/z -
SICKNESS.
The American Federation of Labor
recently made a study of sickness in
the United States, concluding that it
costs the average family $l6B a year.
Stressing the fact that the family
with the least income gets the least
medical service, regardless of need,
the federation argues the need of
federal sickness insurance.
Best Gift to Leave
The best kind of gift to leave one’s
children is an inheritance of moral
ideals higher and better than one’s
own.
Don’t use smelly,
selves that stain and
garments bed
clothes!
Treatment
Soothes instantly. Kills the
tiny mites that burrow
. under the skin and cause
*h e kching. Clean, quick,
cheap and sure. All drug
gists— 50f
McGINNIS DRUG CO.