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BEELER county eagle
L 1.50 A Year, In Advance
OFFICIAL ORGAN WHEELER CO
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
JACK B. GROSS, Publisher
Entered at the Post Office at Alamo,
Georgia, as second class mail matter,
May Kith, 1913, under Act of March
3rd, 1879.
Subscription Rates
12 Months $1.50
6 Months 75c
3 Months 50c
In Advance
CARD of THANKS: Resolutions,
Obituary, Notices of Entertain
ments where an admission is to
be charged or other notices not
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pany copy in all cases.
Two Years of the New Deal
This March 3 ends the second
year of President Fianldin D.
Roosevelt’s administration. In
"things thatcomehome to men’s
business and bosoms” few
periods of American history have
been so eventful as these hurry
ing twenty four months. They
began in the cloud of confusion
and fear. Under the strain of a
long depression nerves were
about to snap, morale was sink,
ing, and in many hearts faith
was near flickering out.. The
crisis was not only that of mil
lions seeking but not finding a
chance to earn daily bread; it
was that also of captains of in
dustry and finance whose colors
had fallen, whose rallying cry
had failed. The vision, without
which the people perish, bad
vanished; the leadership, witiiout
which they cannot go toward,
was lost.
Contrasting that state of affairs
and that state of mind with con
ditions as they are today, we
realize what it meant to the
country when Roosevelt took the
helm. It he had done nothing but
change the mood of those ft ar
stricken hours and provide a
basis for reasmable and hopeful
cooperation, be still would have
marked an epoch, for he came
when the balance trembled be
tw :en a new deal and destructive
revolution. But the work of thesi
two years has not only averted
disaster, it has opened away to
permanent security and has laid
the foundation for a prosperity
that will endure because it will
be girded by economic and social
justice.
The task is far from finished,
but so well advanced that it can
not fail unless we forget all the
warning history out of which it
grew. —Atlanta Journal.
AGENTS
and others wanted to
sell Double Edge
Razor Blades.
My price $2 per IGO.
SIO.OO per 1000.
Cash with order only.
No checks or stamps-
JAMES GALLO.
BOX 91.
FLUSHING, L. 1.. N. Y.
FEWER
COLDSW
QUARERLY REPORT
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
The following report of the County Commissioner
covers a period of three months, dating from the first
Tuesday in January, 1935 to the first Tuesday in April
1935, showing receipts and disbursements by warrants:
RECEIPTS
Highway certificates 9,55 89
Part payment on Pricella Mackey, taxes 1930
00
Gasoline Check 3,191 70
Balance on Pricilla Macky taxes 1930 10 50
Part damage to court house, Etna Insurance Co.
48
Check from Rochester Insurance Co 25 48
Check for damage in fire 69 49
Highway certificate year 1987 11,981. 63
Total Recepts $16,255 68
DISBURSEMENTS
Georgia Power Co. lights 10 84
The Gadin Co. paint 30 00
H N Sears shiriff, offical work 312 30
Austin Western Machine Co. supplies 34 20
Yancey Tractor Co. supplies 19 73
C A Morrison lights, for cannery 19 55
D A Lubercant Co. oil 65 00
The Lubro Co. motor oil 156 00
J H Gross stationary 50 00
T H Jackson salary 140 50
Atlantic Refinery, fuiel oil 41 99
LC Mcßae salary 52 00
Joe Robinson jainator 20 00
Vidalia Supply Co. plaster and paint 188 48
Standard Oil Co. gas and oil 237 85
H L Sears election papers 5 00
W C Riner holding J. P. election 8 00
T A Morrison payroll 249 60
E M Rackley dental work 2 00
Alamo Hardware Co. supplies 25 10
J H Dixon lumber 147 15
G L Hatta way attorney fees 25 00
Ed Towns lumber 58 10
Albert Hinson corn. 64 34
C L Galbraith, T. O. recording tax fl fas.. 102 30
W C Coleman work on court house 12 00
Wakes Batteiy service station.. 12 35
New City Market supplies 296 06
Harvill Mitchell bay — 83 94
Service Motor Co. supplies. ........... 9 25
M II Boyer salary 37 50
J A Mcßae salary 100 00
J B Clark salary 25 00
J F Sikes salary 50 00
Lee G Whitaker salary 80 00
M Bridges salary 20 00
Dr D C Colson salary.. 35 00
Town of Alamo water for January 15 00
Vital Statisces 12 10
CE Rountree agent freight.. 9 14
The Gallin Co. paint 110 41
Paupers 316 00
Southearstern Telephone Co. messages. 15 60
R G Perdue lumber 28 48
W E Currie coffin 10 00
H R Cook hay.. 119 44
T H Jackson county police, salary 175 00
1) J Sears gas and oil.. 21 60
Dr W A Rivers medical service 10 00
L C Mcßae treating cattle 52 00
Yancey Tractor Co. supplies 16 23
Alamo Cash store supplies 3 60
J H Gross tax rounds for receiver 4 00
Yancy Concrete Co. highway markers 3 25
Georgia Power Co. lights .... 10 84
Universal Mfg. Co. soap. 121 52
Berry Boyd wood for jiil 2 50
L M Daniel part commission 100 00
H N Sears shiriff, official work 100 00
H N Sears shiriff, feeding prisoners 173 50
LSByrd wood. 1 00
Roberts and Son office supplies... .. 65 16
C A Morrison wotk and lights 3 92
Vidalia Supply Co. supplies 865 31
Freight on paint — 10 56
Standard Oil Co. gas and oil 207 40
II W Purvis lumber 171 03
T A Morrison payroll ... 242 06
Peebles Pharmacy supplies.. 1 85
W W Neai corn 34 31
Mrs. AthaT Philips bay 85 31
Albert Hinson hay and corn ..... 127 06
Wheeler County Motor Co. supplies 23 85
New City Market supplies 176 18
Mrs. II D Gaskin pauper 5 00
Telfair Motor Co. tires for truck 39 10
M II Boyer salary 37 50
J A Mcßae salary 100 00
J B Ciark salary 25 GO
J F Sikes salary .... 50 00
Lee G Whitaker salary.. 100 00
M Bridges salary 20 00
Dr 1) C Colson salary 35 00
Town of Alamo water for February 15 00
Joo Robinson salary— 20 00
Vital Statists.. — 18 60
Paupers for February 313 50
Paid to school board, damage on books 44 00
Southeastern Telephone Co. services 6 80
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA
W C Coleman lumber 2 4Q
Mt. Vernon Bank exchanges 5 15
Ben Dixon corn 39 93
Halliman Motor Co. work on magneta, truck 12 35
Children Servis Socity supt of 1 child.. 14 00
Pitman Chimical Co. supplies for jail 86 67
I 1 H Jackson salary 175 00
Yancy Tractor Co. supplies 298 54
Indina Mills Co. mule feed 232 50
Dr J D Mangham professional service 16 00
Peebles Pharmacy supplies 18 25
L C Mcßae treating cattle 28 00
Georgia Power Co. lights 9 23
C A Morrison work on septic tanj 3 50
Max L Segall merchandise 2 16
G O Stone casket set 4 16
Vital Statistics 14 95
Foote and Davies office supplies 10 20
L M Daniel part commission 75 00
Ed Cox bural expences, E G S Cox 5 00
Vidalia Supply Co. supplies 9 85
Peebles Undertaking Co. casket 37 70
Standard Oil Co. gas and oil 130 90
H W Purvis lumber 387 21
Alamo Hardware Co. supplies 95 25
New City Market supplies 258 19
T A Morrison payroll 233 87
B L Boyd wood for jail 2 50
Service Motor Co. supplies 30 45
Alamo Hardware company supplies 18 35
M H Boyer salary 37 50
J A Mcßae salary 100 00
J B Clark salary 25 00
J F Sikes salary 50 00
Lee G Whitaker salary 90 00
M Bridges salary . 20 00
Dr D C Colson salary 35 00
Town of Alamo water for March 15 00
Joe Robinson janitor 20 00
Paupers list 344 70
Total for quarter ... $9,710.09
J. F. SIKES, J.A.McRAE
Clerk. Commissioner.
More Power to the South!»
Expecting record summer motor travel this spring and summer in the
Southland, William E. Smith, president of the Standard Oil Company
(Kentucky), has arranged Immediate distribution In this region of a new
kind of summer motor oil made by the revolutionary Clearosol Process.
Mr, Smith Is shown here receiving from Miss Beatrice Deader the first can
of the new oil to arrive by airplane.
A NEW kind of summer motor oil
** refined by the Clearosol Proc
ess, which has been called the most
revolutionary development in the
history of the petroleum industry,
was announced today- by W. E.
Smith, president of the Standard Oil
Company (Kentucky). The new
Mobiloll will be available through
out this area this week.
"The process 'washes' out carbon
and gum forming Impurities from
the crude oil,” Mr. Smith explained.
"As a result the oil Is free from
those weak and unstable elements
which burn up with engine heat.
Motorists will be able to drive far
ther this summer and spend less in
oil purchases.
“The Clearosol Process developed
by the Socony-Vacuum Oil Com
pany is really simplicity itself, al
though it was discovered only after
years of research by chemists and
refinery engineers seeking a new
way to improve lubricating oils to
meet the demands of Increased mo
tor car performance. Two cleansing
fluids or solvents are used. One of
I'VE FOUND VICKS W YES.. AND VICKS
VA-TRO-NOL HELPS O VAPORUB HELPS
PREVENT r SHORTEN
COLDS A COLD
• JUST A FEW DROPS *JUST RUB ON
UP EACH NOSTRIL* Jg&jl
full details in each Vicks package
them, cresylic acid, dissolves and
settles the natural impurities pres
ent in the finest crude petroleum.
The other, propane, absorbs the
valuable parts of the oil. Since pro
pane is normally a gas and must be
compressed before It turns to a
liquid, all of the valuable parts of
the motor oil are retained and the
propane is set free as a gas when
the propane • oil mixture reaches
room temperature. /
“Tests in the laboratory and on
the road with the old-type oils
showed that the engine valve cham
bers were coated with gum after 100
hours of operation. Pistons were
blocked and rings were stuck with
tnuck. This gum and muck was
formed by impurities which the old
type refining method by filtration or
acid treatment failed to remove
from the crude oil. The new summer
Moblloil has the highest resistance
to gumming of any oil yet devel
oped, because the impurities have
been 'washed' out of the crude pe
troleum by the action of the sol
vents.” *
Cereal Tips
L— By Barbara Brooks ...
jjgggl VAaW ...
s t**j<
110 you know that delicious pastry
■*-' for pies and tarts can be made
with corn flakes ? Put 4 caps of corn
flakes through a food grinder,using
the fine cutter. Mix with one-fourth
cup sugar, one-fourth cup melted
butter and one-half teaspoon cinna
mon. Brush pie pan with butter and
line bottom and sides with the
crumbs. When filling has been added
bake in the usual manner.
The next time you prepare Wal
dorf Salad sprinkle bran flakes over
the salad just before serving, in
place of nut meats. The bran flakes
supply an appetizing crispness to
the texture of the salad, while their
nut-like flavor goes perfectly with
the diced apples.
Science has shown that the sleep
of adults was improved 6 per cent
by eating a before-bed-time dish of
corn flakes and milk to stave off
hunger pangs. The sleep of children
was improved 14 per cent by sub
stituting a supper dish of the easily
digested corn flakes and milk. in
place of a heavier main dish.
Beauty Hints
By Jane Heath —...
sA
jTW INF
IF you were not gifted by Nature
with curly lashes and a ravish
ing, starry-eyed look, don’t despair.
There’s a clever eyelash curler that
will do the trick for you. Curved to
fit the eye, it trains the lashes up
ward with a gentle squeeze on the
handles. Hold a few seconds—and
presto! Another secret of the movie
star’s dressing-table is yours.
Blue eye-shadow is the most pop
ular color of the half dozen shades
offered this season.
When shaping eyebrows with a
tweezer, never pull hairs out
“against the grain.” Always pluck
each hair gently in the same direc
tion in which it is growing.
What Vocation Shall
My Boy Choose?
By A. B. Clemens,
Director, Mechanical Schools,
International Correspondence
Schools.
We lire'in a changing world.
Opportunities for success in the
future will differ from those in
the past. A yoang man’s wise
choice of his life work may do
much to determine success or
failure. How shall he choose?
f Ground Aviation
F OS every aviation pilot in' the
air there are four to six men on
the ground who are necessary to
keep the pilot aloft These are the
men who build the engines and
planes, who check them and keep
them in condition. •
Through good years and bad, air
mileage has steadily increased.
What the limits of this progress
will be no one can now foresee,
but as progress continues there la
certain to be a constant increase in
the need for skilled men on the
flying fields and in the factories
where the planes and engines are
constructed. Few lines of work seem
to offer better opportunities to the
young man starting on his career.
To be an aviation technician re
quires both experience and techni
cal knowledge. License require
ments and other government regu
lations have made it impossible for
any but highly skilled men to suc
ceed. These requirements, however,
have broadened the opportunities
for the young man willing to work,
to study and to learn.
The most direct start toward suc
cess in this field would be getting
a job as a helper or apprentice in a
plant where planes or engines are
built, or in a shop at a flying field.
If this is impracticable, the young
man can get a start toward the ulti
mate goal by obtaining a similar
job in a shop where almost any type
of high-speed internal combustion
engine is built, assembled, op re
paired.
■ The job itself, whether in avia
tion or a field allied to it, will sup
ply valuable experience, while the
necessary technical knowledge can
be obtained through reading. jpd