Newspaper Page Text
LOCALNEWS
Mr. Guss Chapion, Mr. Brown
Dobin, of Seloam, spent the
week end with Mr. and Mrs
W. O. Brocks.
Quite a number from Alamo
attended the show at Mcßae, on
Monday and Tuesday of this
■week.
Mr. J.T. Mathewis,of Seloam,
spent the week end with his
mother, Mrs. Lizzie O’Neal, and
also his sister, Mrs. W. 0.
Brooks.
Messrs Max L. Segall and W.
J. Futral, Jr., of Glenwood, were
business visitors in Alamo on
Wednesday of this week.
P. O. J. Sugar Cane—Booking
orders for March delivery. See
or write us. E. D. Clegg Seed
Company, Scotland, Ga.
Many friends of Mrs. W. C.
Causey regret to learn that she
has been quite ill the past few
day.
Mr. H. S. Hurwitz is confined
to his bed, his many friends hope
.0 see him out again soon.
I
The many friends of Mr. G. E.
Harrelson, of the Erick com
munity, will be glad learn that
he has return home from the
Claxton hospital. Dublin. He has
been confined in the hospital for
several week’s suffering from
blood posion, caused from an
effected tooth.
The many friends of Mrs. J.
Hobson Walker, will be glad to
learn that she returned home
Sunday, from the Macon hospital,
Macon, where she underwentan
operation for appendicitis. Latest
report is that she is getting along
nicely and expects to be out
again soon.
Many friends of Miss Margaret
McLeod, will be glad to learn
that she was able to return to
her home yesterday, after un
degoing an operation for ap
pendicits at the local clinic, on
Monday night of last week. Her
friends Hope that she will soon
be able to be out again.
Getting a Job and
Getting Ahead
By Floyd B. Foster,
Vocational Counselor,
International Correspondence
Schools
Difficulties Provide the Opportu
nities for Success
A PROMINENT business execu
« tive has said that if he had to
name the one quality most essential
for success in business, he would say
that it is the ability to And genuine
pleasure in overcoming difficulties.
A tendency to shrink from or avoid
difficulties can be a wellnigh fatal
handicap to the young man starting
his business career.
Every responsible job in every
line of work presents its difficulties.
The more responsible and better
paid the job, the more it abounds
with them. It is this very fact that
accounts for the fascination of busi
ness, and that assures the man suc
cessful in overcoming difficulties an
ample reward for his labors. It is
safe to say that the site of an in
dividual’s earnings is an accurate
measurement of the number of diffi
cult situations he must deal with in
the course of a day’s work.
There are millions of people who
can fill the routine jobs which busi
ness provides. Their reward is th*
reward the rank and file always re
ceives. The opportunities for suc
cess lie in doing the difficult jobs.
The man who finds himself in a job
where there do not seem to be any
difficulties can be sure there is no
future in that job for him.
If your goal is a successful busi
ness career you cannot do better
than hunt for difficulties. Never try
to avoid them or pass them on for
someone else to worry about Learn
to discover and cope with them bet
ter than the men around you, and
yous success la assured.
Restrict Law-Making in London
Local authorities In the metropoli
tan district of London are prohibited
from making bylaws by a police act
•f nearly 70 years ago. All these dis
tricts are dealt with by the home of
Sevilln Orang**
The Seville orange is a sour variety,
named for Seville, Spain; the fruit Is
Med largely for making marmalade. 1
’ I Roy Smith’s Beauty Shop Mcßae, Ga. |
" ■ 8
PERMANENT WAVES Phone 278
■ ZOTOS machineless permanent SIO.OO
3 ■ Shelton oil of tulip wood wave 5.50
S Shelton white oil wave 4.50
■ No amonia wave 4.00 L .
a H
1 ■ French oil wave $3.50, Regal oil wave $3.00 Bonite wave $2.50 §
Tune in your Raido for ZOTOS machineless permanent
. ■ wave program Sunday over Columbia net work, starting Feb.,
i ■ 23rd from 6to 6:30 eastern standard time.
J I
I
I
Getting a Job and
Getting Ahead
By Floyd B. Foster,
Vocational Counselor,
International Correspondence
Schools
The Importance of Knowing
Your Own Mind
SOME years ago the personnel
director of one of the country’s
largest business organizations re
marked that in his experience one
of the rarest of human individuals is
the young man about to enter busi
ness who possesses a fairly definite
idea of what he wants to do and his
qualifications for doing it.
To be uncertain in your own mind
about what you want to do when
you are applying for a job is a seri
ous enough handicap, but the handi
cap is far more serious if the uncer
tainty continues for months or years
after you have landed the job. Yet
this uncertainty does continue to
exist in the minds of great numbers
of men and is a factor largely re
sponsible for the lack of success of
those who spend their entire lives
drifting from one job to another,
never earning more than a bare liv
ing in any of them.
In nearly every business the pe
riod of apprenticeship is likely to
be more or less boring and is rarely
highly remunerative. But this period
can be invaluable to the beginner if
he uses it to study the workings of
the, business in all its phases, and
to make up his mind m which of
these phases—accounting, research,
selling, general administration, etc.
—he is most interested and best
qualified to succeed.
The business leaders of tomorrow
will be the young men who today are
using their apprenticeship to dis
cover where their interests and ap
titudes lie, who are developing a def
inite purpose to chart their careers
accordingly, and who by observa
tion, reading and study are equip
ping themselves to attain their goal.
tim uw...|
re-beating
Wt-over vege-
.. K table®, add a
teaspoonful of
Y Sugar along
with salt and
4" t pep p er ••
\ \ blend? and
w— fIM restores
flavor.
..Jauotu jjejjajunoo L[uo yj
.Cl»IJO)ox ’PioS onj; aq; gj„ ’UMOjaujqD
jo aS us aqj ‘ojj m pins H ‘acnßA„
P’S P n " P°®3 •’LL
HARRIS & SMITH NEW FUNERAL
HOME, McRAE, GA.
Especially designed with modern equip
ment enables us to meet all requirements
in service and prices. Our licensed embalm
ing assures you best service obtainable.
We have everything you need for a com
plete funeral. Let us servie you.
Ambulance service; Lady Attendant.
HARRIS & SMITH FUNERAL HOME
DAY PHONE 72 NIGHT PHONE 17
MCRAE, GA. ।
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA
Better Breakfasts
Kb
LMBSm ? ■.
VBN| "
C 4 T ET us be gay’’ Is the beet I
sort of motto for the
breakfast table. This is a
meal at which cheerfulness Is
really an asset.
If ths morning sun comes into
your dining room, encourage It by
lifting the blinds to Its golden
gplendor. If the room faces north
•r west, perhaps you can find a
•unny corner elsewhere In which
to set the breakfast table—a
bridge table will do nicely, if the
family Is small, and it Is fun to
make of the first meal of the day
* movable feast.
r Field Flower China
Use your gayest china, aome
thXig with field flowers on it, or
bright plates and cups in a variety
of tones—should it not be of egg
shell thinness, it matters not at
all for this informal meal.
Dick*** From Larg* Family
John Dickens, father of Charles
Dickens, the novelist, bad eight chil
dren, as follows; Fanny, later Mrs.
Barnett; diaries; Alfred (died In child
hood) ; Letitia; Harriet (died In child
hood; Frederick; Alfred Lamart and
Augustus.
S! • • ;art,7~~ • ■ txx—: ■ • —— — . - _ , _____ * — ■ * .
, *** *‘, X X V X X ;
!
| 17-16th., Inch Staple Cotton Seed
i * r
Wilt Resistant, 82 per Cent
ill
Germination. Gov’t., test Guaran-
teed absolutely pure.
UI Special prices on quantity lots, s
I HORSESHOE BEND FARM
§ Glenwood, ----- Georgia.
I I
X!
| As for food, give them Better
; Breakfast. Here is a menu which
| will add perceptibly to the gaiety
of even she gayest spring morn
ing.
Strawberries and Cream
Cold Cereal
Scrambled Eggs and Hor my
Peach Jam I'oast
Coffee
Scrambled Eggs and Hominy:
Fry four slices bacon ■: >, re
move from skiliet. Drain one
half No. 3 can hominy, add to
hot fat. saut6 a delh . ur:
Beat four eggs slicHtly ora ;:d
to hominy, cook gently until
are done. Season to tn : tdd
bacon broken up, or lay mm, y on
top. About one-fourth y; mated
cheese may be upriukkd over
top. Serves four.*
FOR SALE
Several mules and horses for
sale. See me if you wont bar»
gain. W. E. Currie, Alamo.
PROGRAM
(PRINCESS
Theater Mcßae, Ga
I A . Mirtin and Thompson Theatre
h Program week of March 2-7.
Monday—Tuesday
“Hands Across The Tabe”
with
Carole Lombard Fred McMurray
‘ ' Comedy-Oh Evaline,
Wednesday
“Metropolitan”
t with
Lawrence Tibett Virginia Bruce
Fox News
Thursday and Friday
“Professional Soldier”
with
Victor McLaglen-Freddie Bartho
lomew, also comedy.
Saturday
“Western Frontier”
with
Kin Maynard, comedy—Football
Chapter 8, The Miracle Eider.
Coming! Coming! Coming!
March 9th., & 10th., So read the
ROSE with Randolp Scott March
j 12th., Rendezvous with William
( powell.
PROGRAM
Metro Theater
Mount Vernon, Ga.
I Monday—Tuesday, March 2-3.
“WHIPSAW”
Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy. A
i great Metro Goldwyn Mayer—
super special, one of t he season’s
j best also gat g comedy “Little
Papa”.
Wednesday, March 4
‘ BONNIE SCOTLAND”
S an Laurel, Oliver Hardy. A
big show and plenty of fun. Don’t
| miss it, and comedy.
Thursday—Friday, March 5-6
“O’Shaughnessy’s Boy”
Wallace Beery, Jacky Cooper,
Spanky McFarland. A great
show —also good comedy,
Saturday, March 7
‘’VAN!SHING RIDERS”
. Bill Cody. A Western full of
thrills —also comedy and added
attraction. Shows at4—7:3o and
9:15 daily.
MOTHER!
don’t experiment
with your
| Childs Cold
i JI
I Or
I ' aJM
Often, “mere colds” have serious
consequences. It is dangerous to
neglect a cold —equally dangerous
to experiment with half-way
measures.
Feel safe! Use Vicks Vapoßub
— the proved external method of
treating colds. No risks of constant
internal “dosing”, which so often
upsets delicate digestions and low
ers resistance when most needed.
DOUBLE DIRECT ACTION
Just rubbed on at bedtime,
Vapoßub fights a cold direct—two I
ways at once—by stimulation and
inhalation. This combined poultice
vapor action loosens phlegm —
soothes irritated membranes—eases
difficult breathing —helps break
congestion. Often by morning the
worst of the cold is over.
I
NOTICE OF SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Because of default in the payment
of a loan secured by a deed to secure
debt executed by John A. wheeler to
The Federal Land Bank of Columbia,
S. C. dated the 23rd day of June,
1922, and iecordedinthe Clerk’s < ffice
of Wheeler county Superior court in
book 5 page 25, the undersigned has
declared the full amount due aid
payable, and, acting under the power
sale contained in said deed for the
purpose of paying said indebtedness
will on the 3rd day of March, 1936
being the first Tuesday i n March,
during the legal hours of sale at the
courthouse in said County, sell at
public outcry to the highest bidder
for cash, the lands described in said
deed, to-wit:
All that certain piece, parcel, or
tract of land containing one hundred
one and one fourth (1011-4), acres,
more or less, situate, lying and being
near the Alamo and Towns road
about 2 miles south from the town of
Alamo in the 1450th District G. M.
and being all of the Southeast one
half of lot of land number eighteen
(18), in the eleventh land district of
Wheeler County, Georgia, having
such shape metes and bounds as wil
more fully appear by reference to a
plat thereof according to a plat of
the original survey of said land; and
being bounded on tbe Northeast by
lands of J. H. Stroud; on the South
east by lands of Wm. Hughes estate;
on the Southwest by lands of N. P.
Neilson; and on the Northwest by
lands of S. E. Mauney. This being
the same tract of land conveyed by
C. C. Hightower by warranty deed
dated November 2nd 1910, and one
dated October Bth 1915 one recorded
in office of Clerk of Superior Court
Book No. 15, page 246 of Montgomery
county and the other recorded in deed
book No. 2 page 16 in office of clerk
of superior court in wheeler county.
The grantor in said deed to secure
debt having dibd since the execution
thereof, the aboye described properm '
is advertised and will be sold as th* r
property of the estate of John A.
wheeler for the purpose of paying
the indebtedness of said John A.
Wheeler to the undersigned.
The undersigned will execute a deed
to the purchaser as authorized by the
aforementioned deed to secure debt.
This February sth, 1936.
THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF
COLUMBIA.
By G. L. HATTA WAY,
Its Attorney.
Alamo, Ga.
ADMINISTRATORS SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
By virtue of an order of the court
of Ordinary of wheelercounty, grant
ed upon the application of N- H.
Sears, as administrator of the estate
of Mrs. Amanda Bridges, deceased,
late of said county, too sell the lands
of the said deceased, for the purpose
of paying debts and distribution,
there will be sold before the court
house door, at public outcry, to the
highest bidder, in the town of Alamo,
between the legal hours cf sale, on
the first Tuesday in March, 1936, as
the property of the said deceased, the
following described iands to-wit: lots
of land number 427-428 474 and 480
lying and being in the 7th land dis
trict of wheeler county, Georgia,
containing 202 1-2 acres each more or
less, terms of sale cash.
This 3rd day of February 1936.
N. H. Sears, administrator of
Mrs, Amanda Bridges, deceased.
SHERIFF’S SALE
<i
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court
bouse door on firstTuesday InM-rch,
1936, the following described pi^T'
erty:
1 two horse wagon white hickory
make, 1 two horse Oliver turning plow,
2 one horse Oliver turning plows, 1
cotton planter, one Planter junior
I guano distributor, one Fowler plow
and 3 straight stocks.
Said property levied on and will be
sold as he property of Mrs. Mary A.
Burns to satisfy a fi-fa based on the
foreclosure of a bill of sales in
wheeler Superior court by Vidalia
Production Credit Association.
This February 6th, 1936.
H. N. Sears. Sheriff.
Wheeler County, Georgia.
Periods of History
Ancient history begins with the earli
est records that exist, and extends to
the fall of the Roman empire In the
West, A. D. 476. Medieval history em
braces the period of about 1,000 years
between the fall of Rome and the dis
covery of America by Columbus, A. D.
1492. Modern history commences with
the close cf the medieval period and
•steads to the present time.
250 Fiji Island*
Os the Fiji Islands, numbering 250 In
all, only 80 of them are Inhabited with
t total population «f 160,000. Suva,
the capital, is situated on tbe most
liqporta&t island Vid Lem.