Newspaper Page Text
For Representative
To the Voters of Wheeler County:
I herewith announce my candidacy
for re-election as Representative from
Wheeler county, subject to the rules
and regulations of the Democratic
Executive Committee I sincerely ap
preciate the favors shown me in the
past, and if re-elected, I promise the
same faithful and impartial service
in the future as in the past.
Respectfully,
B. E. RIVERS.
For Representative
To the Voters of Wheeler County:
Having for several years craved the
honor of representing Wheeler county
in the State Legislature, I hereby an
nounce myself a candidate for Repre
sentative of my county, subject to the
rules of the executive committee of the
democratic party, in September pri
mary, 1930. The vote and support es
all will be greatly appreciated. If
honored with the election, I shall ad
vocate the following amendments and
changes in our present laws, along
with others, to-wit:
I would advocate an amendment to
the fishing law of the county so as to
make same a state wide law, allowing
shorter closed seasons, or probably
no closed season for fishing with hook
and line, and make same uniform
throughout the state.
Also advocate a change of the tax
law so as to make “poll tax” pay
ment the only requirement for right of
suffrage.
Also a change or possibly repeal of
road tax law.
I would favor a change in our bank
ing laws so as to provide liquidation
of closed banks by receiver under ap
pointment and supervising of our
courts of equity, which I believe would
lessen expenses of liquidation and
mean more for creditors of bank.
Also would advocate change in ap
propriations for education which 1
believe would warrant larger appro,
priations for county schools in state.
I would advocate change in the
Motor-carriers’ Act, passed at 1929
session of legislature, so as to allow
farmers privilege of using their trucks
to assist each other in hauling their
products without being subject to the
bond and tax as now required.
Would advocate more economic
administration of entire state govern
mental affairs in general.
G. L. HATTAWAY.
>
W. C. ROUNTREE, M. D.
PELLAGBA A SPECIALTY
If you have many of the following
symptoms, I have the remedy, no mat
ter what your trouble has been diag
nosed: Nervousness, stomach trouble,
loss of weight, loss of sleep, sore mouth,
hurting in back of head, shoulders or
back, peculiar swimming in head,
irothy-like phlegm in throat, passing
HDpf mucous from the bowels (especially
^^Kter taking purgative), .burning feet,
^^^ellow or brown skin, burning or itch
-1 ing skin, rash on bands, face and arms
resembling sunburn, chronic constipa
tion, (sometimes alternating with di
arrhoea), copper or metallic taste, skin
sensitive to sun heat, forgetfulness,
despondency, thoughts that you might
lose your mind, gums red and falling
away from the teeth, general weakness,
loss of energy, and look older than you
are. If you have many of these symp
toms, have taken all kinds of medicine,
and are still sick, I especially want YOU
to write for my FREE booklet, ques
tionnaire, and diagnosis.
W. C. Rountree, M. D.. BOX 1150
T*ept. 1-F, Austin, Texas
NATIONAL-BEN FRANKLIN
Fire Insurance Company
oi Pittsburgh, Pa.
JOSEPH A. POPE, Agent
ALAMO GA.
JNO. S. STAMPS
INSURANCE
Mcßae, Ga,
66 6 Tablets
Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in
50 minutes, checks a Cold the first
day, and checks Malaria in three days
666 also in Liquid
Let Hot Sandwiches Help
Keep Friendships Warm
nrin
LJUI
ri i ijfW I
r..
By JOSEPHINE B. OIBSON
Director, Home Economics Dept.,
H. J. Heinz Company.
THE little suppers we serve
when people drop in inform
ally to pass the evening, can be
made most enjoyable affairs. The
food served does not need to be
elaborate, but the menu should be
carefully planned so it will be at
tractive without requiring too
much preparation.
Hot sandwiches are especially
nice to serve on such occasions
and they can be made very
easily and quickly. Served with
Spanish Queen Olives, pickles and
relishes, such sandwiches form a
complete party meal, though crisp
cups of lettuce, filled with Chili
Sauce, Sandwich Relish or cole
slaw, are favored by many host
esses as a delicious accompani
ment.
Serve some of these appetizing
sandwiches at your next party, for
everyone is sure to like them:
Open Club Sandwich: —
Cut bread 1/3 inch thick and
toast quickly so it will not be
hard and dry. Then butter each
slice. On one slice place a let
tuce leaf, and then a slice of
tomato. Spread with Salad Cream,
and a tart spicy dressing, which
is perfect for this type of sand
wich. Next add two slices of
crisp bacon. On a second slice of
buttered toast place a slice of
chicken or other cold meat —it
may be veal or pork, or in an
emergency, a layer of deviled
ham. Sprinkle with shredded let
tuce or watercress, and top with
a spoonful of Sandwich Relish.
Arrange the two slices of toast
on a plate, and garnish with slices
of tomato or Fresh Cucumber
Pickles.
Toasted Ham and Olive
c , • ■ Brown thin slices oi
(JtlaWlCrl : boiled or baked ham
(or you could substitute bacon for the
ham). Then add ’A cup Stuffed Spanish
Olives, sliced, and heat In the hot fat.
Naval Treaty Hits Snag in Senate
Johnson Threatens to Grow Beard
By E. W. Melson
Our special commentator on Naval Affairs pulled a stroke oar for
the I. C. 8. and for fourteen years was a conductor on the Staten
Island ferries. Aside from six attempts to swim the English Channel,
he is a licensed bilge pumper and was decorated three times by the
Coast Guard for passing the twelve mile limit. Next week he will
tell how the treaty affects the Great Lakes excursion boats and
tattooing on the chest.
Sen. Johnson —Mr. Secretary, would you say this treaty gives us
parity with Great Britain?
Sec. Stimson—l decline to answer that on the ground it might in
criminate me, but I will say that we secured the right to carry
fresh vegetables in case of war and the pants on Great Britain s
sailors are to be no larger at the bottom than ours.
Sen. Johnson —Still, you must admit that the 5-3 ratio with Japan is
practically nullified, if not ossified?
Sec. Stimson —I don’t admit thatl While Japan carries more bunting,
our anchors are much heavier, and our outboard motors exceed
theirs 30 to 1.
Sen. Johnson —Yes, but how do you reconcile Great Britain’s tonnage
with our category?
Sec. Stimson—You have me there. The fact is, in measuring our
category. Sec. Adams lost our yardstick and we used a piece of
string, measuring from the chin. But don’t forget we got an
escalator clause and the right to age our sauer kraut in the barrels.
Sen. Johnson —Does that explain the numb:r of tugboats assigned to
the Cunard Line?
Sec. Stimson—l wouldn’t go that far, but we secured the right to
mount six-inch pin-wheels on the Lehigh Valley coal barges and
1 the Hudson River Night Line.
Sen. Johnson—You seem to have forgotten the irreducible minimum?
Sec. Stimson—Well, in the hurry of packing I did forget it, but the
hotel forwarded it later along with my Indian clubs.
Sen. Johnson—The General Board of the Navy claims that our
sailors no longer have a sweetheart in every port. How did we
lose that ratio?
Sec. Stimson —A secret conference was held on this and the papers
reported next day that we were recruiting bow-legged sailors.
My personal belief is that halitosis lost us this tonnage and that
every sailor should wear a geranium.
Sen. Johnson —Actually, Mr. Secretary, what do we get to balance
Japan’s four-wheel brakes and Great Britain’s extra gangplank?
Sec. Stimson—Clause X 20791 gives us shatter-proof glass in the
windshield of our rumble seats to keep the spray off our full dress
uniforms. In addition to that we retain the right to sing the
Maine “Stein Song,” and to dip all candidates when crossing the
Equator.
Sen. Johnson —Do you believe our Navy can hold the Philippines?
Sec. Stimson—Against Switzerland, yes.
Sen. Johnson —Aren't our guns heavier than hers?
Sec. Stimson—Yes, but her cheese is stronger.
Sen. Johnson —Is this Committee to understand that our delegates
got what they went after?
Sec. Stimson—Well, we got four quarts of Scotch, and we’re not all
home yet.
Sen. Johnson —Mr. Secretary, you must think I’m a foci?
Sec. Stimson—Well, no, I wouldn't say that. But, of course, I
could be mistaken.
(.Meeting was adjourned before personalities set in.)
wheeler count* caglb. alamo, Georgia.
Place the ham or bacon on slices of but
tered toast, add the Stuffed Spanish
Olives, cover with additional slices of
toast. Cut in half and serve with a
tiny crisp lettuce cup filled with Chill
Sauce.
Supper Sandwich :— Slice
white bread 14 inch thick, and
spread each slice with a thin layer
of Prepared Mustard Sauce.
Flake the contents of one can of
tuna fish, and mix with Sandwich
Relish, using half as much Sand
wich Relish as Fish. Spread gen
erously between slices of bread,
and press firmly together. Dip in
slightly beaten egg to which has
been added % cup milk, and salt
and pepper to season. Brown
quickly In a skillet with several
tablespoons butter, and" drain on
unglazed paper. Serve very hot,
garnish with watercress, or a tiny
lettuce cup filled with India
Relish.
Peanut Butter, Bacon, and
Chili Sauce Sandwich :— For e “ c > l
sandwich
toast two slices of bread on one side
only. Spread the untoasted side of one
, slice with Peanut Butter blended with
Chili Sauce. Place slices of crisp bacon
on the untoasted side of the other slice,
and put the two together. Garnish with
Preserved Sweet Gherkins.
Double Decker Sandwich:—
Cut rye, white or whole wheat
bread in thin slices, allowing 3
slices for each sandwich. Spread
with Prepared Mustard Sauce.
Place a leaf of lettuce and a thin
piece of American Cheese spread
with Prepared Mustard Sauce on
one slice, and cover with a second
piece of bread. On this lay boiled
ham or tongue, and spread gen
erously with Sandwich Relish.
Cover with a third piece of bread.
Press firmly together and cut in
half diagonally. Place a Pickle
Fan on top each half. This may
be served with cole slaw.
To Make Pickle Pans: —
Using Preserved Sweet Gherkins, cut
very thin parallel sections almost the
length of each pickle. Then carefully
spread out the sections like a fan.
WHAT IT COSTS TO SERVE YOU WELL
MtR jab p ।
The payroll of the
Georgia Power Com
pany and its subsidiary
companies for 1929
was $5,719,053.00—
every penny of which
went to a citizen of this state. 5,532
employes were needed to serve you.
During the year the Company
bought from Georgia merchants and
dealers materials and supplies cost
ing $7,000,003, and spent several
millioas more for new facilities.
What do you get for ail this out
lay?
Your service was improved. It
became mere dependable. Interrup
tions to your service by reason of
power failure were sharply reduced.
Many small towns and farms which
formerly had no electric service at all
were enabled to enjoy this modem
necessity.
Georgia
POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE S E R V «
Hints For Homemakers .
By Jane Rogers
I
THE new cotton chenille rugs in
gay colors and striking patterns
are the very thing to brighten up
the rooms In the summer home.
The fact that they are washable is
a great advantage. The belter kind
are absolutely color fast, ami will
emerge from the harshest launder
ing without the slightest loss of
shape.
A little grated orange peel gives
squash a different ami wonderfully
delicate flavor. Squash should al
ways be steamed. When tender,
mash in a hot howl until smooth.
Season with salt to taste, one-half
teaspoon sugar, and butter the size
of an egg, for each quart. Beat
well, adding four tablespoons thick
cream. Pile In hot dish and serve.
■
SPECIAL NOTICE
To the voters of Wheeler County:
I have heard that it is being
talked by some that I have pledg
ed myself to create a city court
in Alamo, if elected representa
tive of the county. I here and
now deny that any such pledge
has been made by me or will be
made by me, and say that I will
not interest myself at all with
that issue at this time.
Sincerely yours,
G. L. HATTAW AY.
RELIABLE man 25 to 50 to
sell Watkins products to estab
lished customers in Dodge or
Jeff Davis counties. Average
earnings §40.00 to $50.00 a week.
Liberal credit extended to those
who qualify. Write W.R. Purnell,
Dept. 437, The J. R. Watkins
Company, Memphis, Tenn,
A public utility’s rates are fixed;
its earnings limited; its capitals
zaticn controlled ; its operation
regulated ; its service specified ;
its rules revised, and discrimina
tion and unfair practices by it
are prohibited.
P. S. ARKWRIGHT,
President. |
A New Kind of School!
A -
-
^JrHERE are business colleges and
Qj. schools for secretaries, paper
hanger’s schools and schools of
interior decoration, but did you
know that in the great State of
Oregon the canning of fruits and
vegetables has become so important
an industry that the Oregon State
Agricultural College at Corvallis
has been conducting a Canners’
School each winter during the last
nine years?
It’s a fact, and one important for
the housewife, now that canned
foods are consumed in such gigantic
quantities all over the United
States. This school is largely at
tended by men who want to perfect
their knowledge of canning, but
also by a certain number of women.
The College also gives a four-year
degree course in food products
manufacture, attended by students
from every part of the country, but
WE OPERATE OUR CREAM STATION
Wednesday and Saturday
of each week. Market price paid for but
terfat. Bring us your cream. We pay
cash for eggs.
ARMOUR CREAMERIES
JACK GROSS, Licensed Tester
“ALWAYS SELL TO ARMOUR’S”
ALAMO, GA.
You were given
lower rates. Our res
idential customers paid
$600,000, or approxi
mately 20 per cent, less
in 1929 than they
would have paid for the same serv
ice under the 1928 rates. Electricity
is the only item in the family budget
whose price is under pre-war fig
ures.
Your community, large or small,
is able to offer industry a power
service that a few years ago only
big cities could supply—placing the
smallest village on a par with the
largest centers in this respect.
It costs a lot of money to serve
you well—but by spending this mon
ey we are able to give you better
service, at lower rates.
It is well worth spending!
I
I this shorter term school is for th*
■ benefit of those who want to brush
up on a few items or introduce
i some new product into their plants,
! A Comprehensive Curriculum
For this reason the courses offered
are comprehensive, and cover the
grading and packing of fruits and
vegetables in detail as it is done in
a commercial factory. They are
arranged so that women who are
employed as forewomen in a can
nery can learn to know the grades
and qualities as well as any super
intendent.
Days are devoted to stone fruits,
pome fruits, fresh products, berries,
frozen fruits, vegetable grades as
paragus anti beans, carrots and
beets, pumpkins and tomatoes, and
corn and peas; and prizes are given
to those scoring highest in the Judg
ing of canned foods.* •