Newspaper Page Text
LOCALNEWS
Mr. Joe B Clark,of McArthur,
was in Alamo Tuesday.
Mrs. R. D. Hayes,of Glenwood,
was a visitor in Alamo Tuesday.
Mr. J. W. Douglas of Wadley,
spent the day here Wednesday
with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Milo C. Hartley
and children spent last week end
with relatives in L'uisville.
Mr. J. E. Bomar and Mr. C. P.
Ennis, of Glenwood, were.among
the business visitors in Alamo
Tuesday.
Mr. Pope N. Brown, of Mcßae,
was a business visitor in Alamo
Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Hartley
and Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hartley
spent last Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. 0. P. Hartley near Milan.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Berman
and little son, Julius, of Mcßae,
were visitors in Alamo last Thurs
day afternoon.
Col. H. W. Nalley, Messrs C.
C. Hartley and son, Zelma and R.
A. Hartley spent Wednesday on
the river dishing.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Brown
announce the birth of a daughter
in their home last Thursday,
Mother and daughter reported
as getting along nicely.
The little son of Mr. and Mrs
0 P. Hartley, in Telfair county,
is reported as having been quite
ill, but the many local friends of
the parents are glad to learn that
their son is much improved.
Rev. and Mrs. B. A. Pafford,
of Dublin, were guests of Rev.
and Mrs. J. D. McCord Satur
day and Sunday.
Mrs. C. M. Meeks, of Savan
■nah, is visiting here the guest of
her mother, Mrs. C. B. Hogan
and other relatives,
Mrs. Mathews, of Warrenton,
is visiting here the guest of her
daughter, Miss Marie Mathews,
Home Economics teacher in the
local school.
Judge R. W. Winham, of the
McArthur district was a busi
ness visitor in Alamo Tuesday.
He states that four of his child
ren are down with the measles,
and a regular epidemic is re
ported all oyer, his district.
Misses Irene and Helen Doug
las, and Mr. J. W. Adams, Jr.,
of Bloomindale, spent last week
end with the family of Rev. J. D.
McCord. Miss Douglas and Mr.
Adams, former class mates of
John McCord, are seniors in the
Savannah High school.
■SPEClAL—Beautiful croquig
nole waves, $2.75. Heaterless
machine. The machine that does
not feel, hurts or burns. Persons
Beauty Shop and Studio, Bellevue
Apartments. Dublin, Ga.
Season Observance
Urged By Cravey
BY GEORGIA NEWSPAPER ALLIANCE
Atlanta, April 23—Appeal to
the fishermen of Georgia for
cooperation in efforts of the
Georgia Department of Game
and Fish to enforce state game
laws was voiced this week in a
statement from Commissioner
Zack D. Cravey.
Commissioner Cravey called
attention to the closed season,
under two legislative acts: 1. —
prohibition of hook and line
fishing during the spawning sea
son, April 15 to June 1, in fresh
waters of Georgia; and 2 —pro
hibition of fishing in IS mountain
counties during spawning season
November 15 to March 31.
“We are only asking for the
fishermen to stay off the streams
for forty days during the season
in which the fish are spawning.
"We can’t have any fish or game,
if we don’t allow them to breed,"
Commissioner Gravy said.
“Georgia was the only state in
the Union last year that did not
enforce a clo?e season, our
SW« PAID TO
GEORGIA FARMERS
Washington, April 23. —Geor-
gia farmers were given $8,004,-
18.86 in rental and benefit pay.
merits up to April 1, 1934, for
reducing their acreage in cotton,
■ wheat and tobacco, it was shown
today in figures released by the
farm administration.
Cotton farmers were paid
$7,978,190.47. Rental and benefit
payments to tobacco growers to
that date were listed at $22,035
and wheat growers in three
Georgia counties were given a
total of $4,600.80,
Burke county farmers ceceived
! the largest sum disbursed in
I Georgia as rental and benefit
payments for cotton acreage re
duction. Farmers in that county
were paid $263,197.75. Laurens
county was next with payments
totaling $206,608.55.
Payments to tobacco growers
were shown in only two counties,
Decatur county farmers receiv
ing $18,960.60 and Grady county
farmers $3,075, Houston county
wheat growers received $568;
Macon county wheat growers
$1,350 and Peach county wheat
growers $2,741.
Cotton payments in their
counties included:
Bartow, $114,074; Bibb, $13,603;
Bulloch, $115,728; Carroll, $151,-
871; Catoosa, $12,551? Chatham,
$276; Chattahoochee, $11,101;
Clarke, $31,190; Colquitt, $115,-
166; Columbia, $54,181; Crisp,
$55,870; Decatur, $34,641; Dodge.
$135,224; Doughterty, $6,260;
Emanuel, $149,640; Floyd, SIOO,-
666; Fulton, $53,804; Harris,
$19,035, Hart. $109,458; Jackson,
$118,037; Jefferson, $162,464;
Johnson, $109,272; Lowndes,
$26,056; Madison, $111,080;
Meriwether, $111,657; Mitchell,
$120,150; Muscogee, $11,233;
Screven, $141,272; Spalding,
$54,935; Sumter, $103,376;
fhomas, $24,100; Tift, $49,022;
Walton, $144,495; Washington,
$168,141; Wilcox, $11,496.
neighbor states all closed their
fishing seasons during that
period in which the fish were
pawning. They recognize that
unless they do, fish will soon be
come extremely scarce and in
>me streams will disappear.
“Because of Georgia’s laxity in
the enforcementof her game and
fish laws, it has been practically
mpossible to get any fish or any
consideration in the way of help
from the Federal Hatcheries or
ihe department handling game
and fish in Washington.
“This department, through
direct promises of enforcing the
closed season was able last year
to obtain some 850,000 Rainbow
and Brown Trout eggs, absoutely
free of charge, for the hatchery
it Summerville. We are now in
■he process of releasing some
800,000 trout in the streams.
(Continued from page 1)
an aggressive anticruelty, society
for more that twenty five years,
and for a longer perioda pract.
icing physician, has come to the
d jfinite conclusion that the rabies
scares are mostly humbugs. He
has never seen a case of the
disease, although closely familiar
for over twenty years with
municipal dog kennel work hand
ing thousands of dogs.’’
Dr. Charles W. Dulles, Late
Lecturer on History of Medicine,
University of Pennsylvania, 1893
1908; Consulting Surgeon to
Rush Hospital; Manager of Uni
versity Hospital, who was uu
bubtedly the greatest authority
ion hydrophobia in this country,
I if not in the world, made a study
lof hydrophobia for over thirty
I years. At the requiest of the
Medical Societj’ of the state of
, Pennsylvania, he made an annual
■ report on hydrophobia, after a
I thorough investigation of all
■ eases reported in the newspapers
and elsewhere. In an address
delivered in Washington, in 1913,
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA
Dr. Dulles said:
“I might cite my own experi
ence in the treatment of persons
bitten by dogs supposed to be
mad, which has furnished not a
single case of the developed dis
ease in thirty years,” and he
added, ‘‘l have probably seen
more cases of so called hydro
phobia than any other medical
man.”
Dr. Dulles also said in this
same address that. "In France,
which is full of Pasteur Insti
tutes, there are supposed to be
annually thousands of cases with
the infection of bydrophobie,
while in Great Britain, where
there is no Pasteur Institute, the
disease does not occur. Another
curious thing is that in Con
stantinople, where dogs have for
centuries run wild in the streets,
there was so little hydrophobia
that it was long denied that it
existed there at all; but since a
Pasteur Institute has been estab
lished cases have been quite
frequent, according to the
Pasteur people. This has been
the experience of every country
in which Pasteur Institutes have
been established. The Pasteur
Method I likewisethink is injuri
ous and responsible for many
deaths.”
According to authoritative
statistics published in the
"Annals of the Pasteur Insti
tute” and other official publica
tions, 2,209 persons have died of
hydrophobia after receiving the
Pasteurian treatment, some of
them undoubtedly in conse
quence of such treatment, as in
certain cases it has been proved
< hat the dogs which had bitten
the patients were not mad.
The U. S. "Public Health Re
ports’’, July 30, 1915, has an
article on "Paralysis During
Antirabic Treatment” by Dr.
H. E Hasseltine, passed assist
ant surgeon, U. S. Public Health
Servics.
In an article in the London
‘ Lance”. May 24, 1930, entitled
"A Fatal Neuro Paralytic Ac
cident of Anti Rabies Treat
ment”, it is said: “The cause of
paralytic accident lies in the
antirabies injections themselves,
and more specifically in some
component of nerve substance
necessarily introduced during
the process of immunization.”
Mr. Albert Payson Terhune
the Wellknown authority on dogs
is reported in “The Humane
Quarterly’’, Washington, D. C.,
May, 1933, as follows: “Os all the
absurd and ill founded legends
about dogs, the mad dog scare is
the worst. Not one supposedly
mad dog in a thousand really has
the hydrophobia. Moreover, a
rabid dog is desperately sick —
too sick and dazed to go out of its
way to attack any one. .. if a dog
Tiucuuduuj Inch NATURE
11 \ 1 W*
■X \ I
lO—- 1
Nature created the land you
farm, the seed you plant. To
make land and seed produce
better,she created three natural
fertilizer materials—potash,
phosphate .and Chilean Natural
Nitrate. She stored Chilean in
the ground to mature a million
years until you should want it
to put it back into the ground
where you make your cropsj
CHILEAN NITRATEfPERHAPSYOU
CALL IT “SODA"OR'SODY) IS THE ONE
ANO ONLY NITRATE FERTILIZER
CREATED BY NATURE. NATURE
GAVE IT THOSE VITAL'IMPURITIES"
IODINE, CALCIUM, POTASSIUM,
SODIUM, MAGNESIUM, BORON
ETC.. TO INCREASE ITS VALUE
TO YOUR. CROPS
“Straight to the People!”
CLAUDE PITTMAN,
Superior Court Judge in the Chero
kee Circuit, and an outstanding
। Georgia jurist, who has announced
in opposition to Governor Talmadge
in the forthcoming primary. Judge
Pittman will carry his campaign
“straight to the people.”
Hints for Homemakers
By Jane Rogers
S' n
, ■ r
1 <
A N attractive way to decorate
tall glasses in which cold
beverages are to be served. Is to
dip the rim first in a r of
lemon juice and then in a saucer
f sugar As the ■ T here ■ it
forms a decorative erj.dul • ng.
Also, sa the beverage is qua; <1
from the glass, the ring giv- it
.m unusual and piquant flavor.
Hot, strong coffee will usually
stop hiccoughs.
A pleasantly tart, tluei; . . an
,lr t mi.de of .ai . •
French dressin.'; and our ■ .a
Thia the Machine Age
A ray that destroys all negatives in
ii camera or concealed about the per
son is used by a European nimiufac
turing concern on nil visitors going
through the entrance of the factory.
It prevents the stealing of industrial
secrets .if machine designs or labura
'ary discoveries.
Many Childless Marriages
Os all marriages in England and
Wales, 38 per cent are childless.
refuses to drink water, there is
just one genuine cause, namely
that it is not thirsty.”
Sue M. Farrell, President
Vivisection Investigaton
League.
SIX YEARS BEFORE DAVY CROCKETT
DIED IN THE ALAMO MASSACRE(IB36)
THE FIRST SHIPLOAD OF CHILEAN
NATURAL NITRATE CAME INTO THE
UNITED STATES THROUGH A VIR
GINIA PORT (1830)
SENSOR CLASS
of
WHEELER CO. HIGH
PRESENTS
“HOBGOBLIN HOUSE”
By Jay Tobias
UNDER DIRECTION OF
ANNIE MARY HARTLEY
8:15 P.M. MAY 4,1934 AUDITORIUM
CHXHXHXF
Cast of Characters:
Darius Krupp—Old caretaker o f “Hobgoblin House”
Paul Thomas
Henry Goober —The darkey gardner Rufus Holliday
Delilah Worts—The darkey cook Ruby Thompson
Susan Parking—’ Henglish’Ousekeeper” .Susie Hartley
Miss Priscilla Carter —Present owner of Hobgoblin House
Helen Hurwitz
Marian Carter —Her Neice Edna Hinson
Jill Carter—Marion’s younger sister Bertie Harville
Jack Loring—Jill’s Fiancee Billie Owens
Frank Harlow—Marion’s Fiancee Robbie Hattaway
Bluebeard Bronson —An escaped maniac. Aldon Hattaway
Bill Wilkins —Bluebeard’s keeper Lester Harrelson
Patricia Arnold—Kidnaped heiress Jessie Seabolt
The Headless Phantom ? ? ?
TIME: Early Spring
PLACE: Near the Ozark Foot Hills.
Synopsis of Acts:
Act 1. Living room of late Horace Hobgoblin’s House,
about nine o’clock of a stormy evening.
Act 2. The same as Act 1. About two minutes later.
Act 3. The same as previous acts. One minute later.
Contest: Election of the Queen of the Wheeler County
High School. The candidates are as follows:
Eleventh grade—Susie Hartley, Queen, Helen Hurwitz.
Maid. V
Tenth grade—Helen Hartley, Queen, Ethel Wommack, 8 "
Maid.
Ninth grad—Millie Weitmou, Queen, Mary Elarbee, Maid.
Eighth grade—Robbie Simpson, Queen., Ethelda Weitmon,
Maid.
Vote for one: 1c per vote.
Queen will be crowned by Maid, after Act 3.
. , . ■ (Adults 25c)
Admission I
i Children 15c*
SENIOR CLASS
OF
GLENWOOD HIGH
PRESENTS
“THE PRICE TAG 55
FRIDAY EVENING
MAYII 1934 AUDITOAIUM B ;3o
■mimwi
Cast of Characters
Glenda Wells —Attractive heroione Carolyn White.
Larry Sangster—Hero and honor student of Belk Univer
sity Robert Rivers
Mrs. Sangster —Larry’s Mother Doris Montford
Miss Willard—Mysterious matron of Belk University
_ „ Alene Joiner
Prof Banks—President elk Muiversity Mr.
Matthews, Jr.
Mr. Halcolm J. Rogers —Prominent member of the Board
of Trustees Astor Clark
Hal Rogers—Son of Halcolm J. Rogers, and star football
player at Belk University Tillman Williams
L’za —A comical Frenchwoman Juanita Smith
Clara, Ivy, Beth, Louise—Peppy students at Belk Univer
sity Nonene Purvis, Vennie Lee Montford,
Neva Purvis, Adel Gurganious.
Herman, Otto, Cliff—Peppy students at Belk University
Edd Bishop, Ccarles Jordan, Raymond Brooks
Minnie—Comical Irish cook Clyde Faulk
Ikey—Jaunitor at Belk University —(Minnie’s husband)
.' Elma Purvis
Don’t miss it because it is a real modern play that every
body likes. ! I Admission 10c children 25c adults.
1934 MAY 1934
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31