Newspaper Page Text
1
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE
$1.60 A Year, In Advance
UFFICIAL ORGAN WHEELER CO
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
JACK B, GROSS,..........Publisher
Entered at the Post Office at Alamo
Georgia, as second class mail matter
May 16th, 1913, under Act of March
3rd, 1879,
Subscription Rates
12Mouthe .. .. ... ... ..9180
g Mohdhe.. . ... ... ... .7
B Moot ... . ... . .. .bop
In Advanec
CARDof THANKS: Resolutions
Obituary, Notices of Entertain
ments where an aamission is to
be charged or other notices not
of general news value will be
charged for at the rate of one
cent a word, Money must accom
pany copyn all cases.
How Much Longer?
There was staged in Georgia
Wednesday a scene the like of
which has not been witnessed in
the state since reconstruction
days.
A candidate for office, the
Governor of the state, contesting
for a seat in the United States
senate, exercised his offical
authority to call out the state
militia toact as a guarding cordon
around the public square in
Monroein which he spoke,
He was adroit enough to in~
struct the militiamen to leave off
their uniforms and appear in
civilian clothes, but none the less
they were troopers of the state,’
paid by the state, and for the
first time since reconstruction
days rendered official service at
a political speaking.
We have had abundant evidence
during the past few months of a
governor gone dictator-wild,
usurping all the functions ot
government, but this reaches the
limit,
The next logical step would be
to take charge of the ballot boxes,
putting them under bayonet con
trol as was done in reconstruc
tion days.
How much longer will Georgia
stand for this sort of thing?—
Atlanta Constitution.
STRAYED—One dark celored
heffer, with light streak running
down her back, with light belly
and white nose, about 18 months
old. Will pay reward for the re
covery of same. H. F. Smith,
Alamo, Ga., Rt. 2,
Checks
666 MALARIA
in 3 days
Liquid Tablets ~ COLDS
Salve, Nose First Day
Drops Headwche, 30 minutes
Try ‘‘Rub-My-Tism''-World’s Best
L Einiment
FOUND AT LAST!
The famous Q-623—quick relief for
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Sciatica, Lum
bago—is now avallable to all suffer
er from these tortures. Q-623 is a
prescription of a famous specialist
that has worked wonders for thous
ands of people when many other rem
edies have falled. We ask you to try
this famous prescription. A few
doses usually stops the pain, and
many people say ‘‘it is worth its
weight in gold.”” Be sure you getan
8-ounce bottle; any other size, or any
other name, is counterfeit, And if you
are bothered with functional bladde,
and urinary irvitations, or need, a
stimulant diuretic for the kidneys
try Q-Tabs—a highly effective pre
scription tablet. Q-623and Q-Tabs are
products of the Associated FPhar
macists of Baltimore, Ine.—For Sale
in Lumber City by Grindle Drug Co.
and in Glenwood by Glenwood
Drug Co.
Honored Himeelf
Willlam Penn first intended to cal
his new dominion Carolins Imstead of
Pennsylvania,
The Double Menace
of Bureaucracy
By RAYMOND PITCAIRN
Mutional Chairman
Sentinels of the Republic
At least three expeditions are now
exploring the tangled forests of Bu
reaucracy which have sprung up on the
banks of the Potomac during recent
years,
A special Senatorial Committee, a
group of American Bar Association
members, and an independent fact
finding agency are among the explorers
who sesk to clear that maze of over
laig)plng agencies, bureaus and commis
sions,
All are enlisted in war on the waste
which duplication of political activities
and of political jobs inevitably breeds.
By eliminating many of the useless and
tax-eating new Federal agencies they
hope to reduce the slice which govern
ment is cutting out of the taxpayers’
earnings and savings.
But it isn't the taxpayers’ pocket
book alone that is endangered by these
hordes of new bureaucrats and new
commissions, The real menace 18 even
more serious.
By usurping the powers reserved un
der the Constitution to the people, the
legislators and the Courts, such aipha
betical agencies have developed into a
serious threat to the rights of civil lib
erty and self-goverrument on which this
Nation was founded.
To them is due that interference by
Federal authorities with the normal ac
tivities of our citizens, which is arousing
nation-wide protest.
From their offices emerge the thou
sands of agents who seck to interfere
with, direct and mould the people ac
cording te the mewer bureaucratic
ideas of agriculture, business and liv
ing in general.
If the various groups which seek to
reduce the number of arrogant and ex
travagant bureaucratic agencles now
reaching out from Washington can ease
the burden on the pocket-book of the
American taxpayer they will have per
formed a great service.
But if, by eliminating many of Bu
reaucracy’s inroads on the rights of the
American citizen, they can protect our
eonstitutional guaranties and privileges,
they will have performed & still greater
and more significant one,
8., e
Getting a Job and
.
Getting Ahead
By Floyd B Foster,
Vocational Counselor,
| International Correspondence
Schools
| Ideas Are Life Blood '
of Business -
~ PR ——
EMPLOYERS want real men-—
men with sound ideas who have
enough confidence in their worth to
present them, and who are able to
defend them if the occasion arises.
Neither the “smart guy” nor the
“ghrinking violet” can look for
ward to much in the present-day
business world. @
Bluff has proved so costly that
employers have been forced to
learn to detect it no matter how
well it is camouflaged. The shy and
shrinking employee may have an
idea worth a fortune to his em
ployer, but it is absolutely valueless
if he keeps it so well hidden that
no one ever knows about it.
Ideas are the life blood of busi
ness and if you can provide them
{our future is assured. They must,
owever, not only be born in your
own mind. They must be carefully
worked out, firmly grounded in
éveryg detail, and presented so
clearly and convincingly that their
value will be apparent.
It is in this last respect that
many men fall down. An idea good
in itself may die still-born because
its presentation leaves an impres
sion of flashiness and insincerity.
Similarly the too-modest man may
ruin the chances for a good idea by
failing to bring out its true value,
by deprecating it even while he
presents it to his employer
The solution is by self-analysis
to acquire that thorough knowledge
~ of your strong and weak points
which in itself gives confidence
without over-confidence, and to
conduct yourself as a man who
knows ®his real worth wifhout
either over-estimating or under.
estimating it. @&
AR 0. AN S YL U AT O e T T, AN .0 A0
By Shakespeare
The quotation, “You blocks, you
stones, you worse than senseless
things,” is found in Shakespeare's
“Julfus Caesar,” Act 1, Scene 1, Line
87. Marullus says it.
Animals That Do Not Change
The cows, and the plgs, and the
tigers, and the llons, and &ll the other
creatures, ranging from the tiny chip
munks to the great hippopotamuses,
are today as they have always been
through recorded history.
Victoria’s Wedding Dress
Pleces from Queen Victoria's wed
ding dress were shown In au old patch
work quilt exhibited at & fair at Mel
bourne, Australis. The wedding took
place i1 1840.
Cartel
A cartel is a form of combination
among manufacturers by which the In
dependent firms and establishments
In a particular trade or process con
tract to regulate their output and iu
certain cases their prices.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA
. For Hot Summer Afternoons
. By Jane ROZETS mmmeemrane
THEY look delightiully refreshing
and they arc—these two thirst
quenching beverages that have
canned, unsweetened Hawalian pine
apple juice as their base. They are
easy to prepare, too, which makes
them still more appropriate for
serving te your guests on hot sum
mer afternoons.
Pineapple-Loganberry Punch
1 cup Hawalian pinespyle fuice
8% cup sugay
1 cup loganberry julce
1 pint (2 cups) carboiated water
Crushed ice
Presh or canned berrias
Dissolve the sugar in the mixed
fruit juices. Chill. Wien ready to
gerve add the carbonated water and
Putting The Car In Shape
For Warm Weather Driving
By C. R. Strouse
Director, School of Automobiles,
International Correspondence Schools
WITH balmy weather at hand
and the open road again exert
fng its lure on motorisis, now is the
time to give the car the ticrough
overhauling it requires if it is to
operate efficiently and economically
throughout the summer months
If you are one of tie many motor
fsts who have acquired the ability
to make adjustments and minor re
pairs you will be able to do muech of
the necessary work yourszelf, but
whether done by you or ol the =erv
fce station it should be dene thor
oughly and prombily. ¢
During the winter, cogprators a{,:
advariced (o provide « Lnyh(':' chagr.
ing rate for cold weather driving
conditions. Now thoy should be set
back to prevent injuries to the
storage battery At the same time,
the distributor poiuts, ignition wir
ing, condenser and epark ;\mgsj
should be checked and ro-mndi»'
tioned, or replaced when necesan ry. |
Winter lubrisants in the ccank:|
case, transmission, and differential |
should . changed for others suit- |
able fuo summer driving, whtle!
every job of overhauling shouid in-g
clude a thorouzh lubrication of all
the other parts wleve lubricants are l
Ptfpil of the Great Escoffier ®
Suggests a Sweet Potato Dish
By Barbara B. Brooks
T)URAINE. one of the old proy-
A inces of I'rance and a cradle of
gastronomic delight, produced the
greatest chef the world has ever’
known—the famous Escoffier. Max
ine, ‘a ‘pupil of Escoffier and chief
chef of a fashionable American res
taurant, reveres the traditions of
‘the master but has found in Amer
4can foods the imspiration for some
of his most successful dishes.
™ Maxine tells of the occasion
when he was called from his kitch
an to receive the congratulations of
8 .member of a Europi;n royal
house who was visiting this coun
try. Only a Frenchman could.
have conceived such a delicious
‘dish, he was told. He smiled as
he acknowledged the praise, for
the secret of the dish was the use
of corn flakes, than which there is
no more distinctly American food.
p Maxine has a panchant for cere
als as an aid in dressing up and
adding to the nutritive value of
various dishes, and below is a re
cipe he gives for Sweet Potato
Sweet Potato Balls
Bor & sweet pota~ 6 marshmallows
* toes (boiled) 1 cap corn flakes
% cup crushed pine- (relled fine)
+ apple (drained) 33 teaspoon salt
1 tablegpoon butter
Boil, peel and mash sweet pota
toes and add pineapple which has
been well drained; butter and salt.
Form into balls with a marshmal
low in the center of each ball. Roll
ifn corn flake crumbs; place in a
greased baking dish and bake in a
hot oven. “Temperature 400 de- 1
grees. Time 15 to 20 minutes.
You will like this so well that I
am sure you will want to try some
thing else in the cereal line; so I
am adding a recipe for Bran Date
Bar§ which you will find particu
larly delicious. ;
Fifth Century Ruins |
The site of a large Byzantine set- i
tlement of the Fifth century, A. D, |
has been discovered in the Libyan |
desert. |
pour over erushed ice. Garnish with
a few fresh or canned berries. 8
servings,
Southern SBtyle Cocktall
2 tablespoons sugar
1% teaspoons chopped mint leaves
1% cups Hawailan pineapple juice
1% cups carbonated water
6 sprigs fresh mint
Add sugar and chopped miat
leaves to 3% cup pineapple juice and
boil & minutes. Strain through
cheesecloth or very fine sieve. Add
other ingredients, shake well and
gerve ice cold with one sprig of
fresh mint in each glass. 6 servings.
This will also make an excellent
beverage for the children’s party,
and they are sure to enjoy it just
as much as their elders will.
|, required.
-1 If the cooling system is to func
| tion properly throughout the sum
[ mer, all the anti-freeze should be
i drained off and the system given a
'lthorough cleaning to remove rust
and other forcign matter, Brake
-}lmmls and drums should be put in
| perfect condition to assure quick
| stoppage when the ability to stop
'iquickly may be imperative for the
L safety of yourself and others.
l The knock that used to warn of
| earbon is rarer now due to better
ggasuunes, but winter driving has
;;,nlpg)st gertainly left a residue of
carbon which should be removed.
| Pisten coandition and piston rings
i should be checked, for if they per
{ mit Tubrication to reach the com
| bustion chamber the carbon will
| quickly form again.
} These are the main points in the
‘sm‘ing overhauling that all ecars
{ need after they have been onerated
{lhroughout a long winter @ If the
| overhauling is omitted compression
| will be Jost, acceleraticn and hill
!climbing ability impaired, cylinders
will acquire thie habit of missing,
and the car is likely to run jerkily
when operated at low speeds.
GOESRRNEE T o fonceee
Re T W e
o YU N ¥ N SR ko
o i ?\\ sl v “ o .
ey S SRR o
SN f,x“” SRR ;i‘;_ o
RS R
L .o (e
R = B SR e
TR A DR SRR S B
BT e
Chef Maxine
Bran Date Bars
3 eges 3% cup all-braa’,
1% cups brown 1 cup nut meals,
SUGAT . {chopped)
3 cup flour %% cup dstes (cut
3, teaspoon baking fine}
powder 5
Beat the ‘eggs until light, add the
sugar and beat well. " Add the flour
sifted with the baking powder. Add
all-bran, nuts and dates. Spread
the mixture in & layer one-half inch
thick in a greased shallow pan.
Bake in a moderate oven (375° F.)
for about 20-30 minutes. Remove
from the oven and while warm, cut
into squares. or bars. Roll the
pieces in powdered sugar or serve
as a pudding with whipped cream.
Provides 24 bars— 1~ x 8-,
Bronx Park Zoo
The Bronx Park zoo, New York, is
seven times as large as the London
zoo and four times as large as Ber
tin's. ’
v Summer Is Salad Time
‘NIHEN summer shows what it is
really capable of by descending
on us with one of its inevitable hot
spells, our palates crave cool and
refreshing foods., The salad is natu
rally our first thought, and a Pine
epple-Tomato Aspic, with its deli
cate blend of tomato and natural,
unsweetened Hawaifan pineapple
juices, is guaranteed to revive the
spirits of even the most heat-ex
hausted family or guests.
Pineapple-Tomato Aspic
2 cups solld pack tomatoes
1 teaspoon dried thyme
« 1 teaspoon salt
6 cloves -~
14 bay leaf
1, teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
3, teaspoon grated onfon
2 drops Tabasco sauce
Ys teaspoon cayenne {(optional)
Bmall can of asparagus tips
2 tablespoons gelatine
2 cups canned Hawallan pineapple julce
Simmer the tematoes with all of
the seasonings and the water from
He KFlies Through The Air ¢
. With The Greatest Os Ease
F 0 AR Bs AR ',“‘-‘;:s‘:,'-:"';"‘»_:’
SR S
SRS B CoRRa RS RRo 1L
R e(0 WA AR AL
Frormsia ol 0 S
ARy . T
eSS
SRS o g
e- L Ty, ’;
SR AN D S S A
«* s&' N
o N
R e
MO < B e e o 5 - X RO
R .
SR Sl T,
Bl S S PN Nl S,
B e ey
&*"i\ «} ; 7}; s f) @%*
% «",_Q 5 i@w
RR S TN G SRS, RN Re N S Lty
George Varoff, hoider of the world |
pole vauit record, and Bill Hayward, |
track coach of the University of
Oregon, who i 3 pouring George's ra-|
tion of pineappie juice which he,
Inclu:es in his training diet. i
FEW would think of miiking cows |
as likely to lead to a new world |
record in the pole vault, but tri-|
umphs in athletics 4&s well as in |
other ficlds frequently trace back to |
such apparently unrelated origins.§
George Varoff, who recently set a|
new world record for this event, |
worked on his father's farm wken a {
boy, and milking the cows helped |
give him the great strength in|
hands and arms so necessary to the |
pole vaulter.
It was at the forty-eighth national |
senior meet of the American Ath-|
letic Unicon, held this month at|
Princeton, N. J., that George estab- |
lished the new record. Until a week !
before he had never vaulted 14;
feet, but at Princeton in his first
try at the dizzy pinnacle, he zoomed |
to the world record of 14 feet clfél
inches, more than an inch better
than anyone had ever done before. |
The farm where George grew upi
was on the Island of Maui, in the
Hawuilan group. Money was nonel
too plentiful and there were younger |
brothers 7 and sisters. George's
mother, however, was an intelligent'
as well as a hard-working parent, !
and the diet she served her brood of |
growing children, George believes,
was anothet important factor in his
unusual muscular development. l
There was always an abundaat
fare of fresh fruits and vegetables,
and George, who retaing his fond
ness for the pineapple which is%
practically synonymous with Hawaii, |
includes pineapple juice in his train-l
ing diet. During the train ride East,
with other athletes bound from the
West Coast for the AATU. meet,!
Says Dangerous Waricose Veins
Can Be Reduced At Home
Rub Gently Upward Toward the Heart
2s Blood in Veins Fiows That Way
If gou or any relative or friend is
worried because of varicose veins, or
bunches, the best advice for home treat
ment that anyone in this world can give,
i 8 to get a prescription known as
Moone's Emerald Oil. |
. Simply ask your druggist for an or
igins] (sg-guaee borue of Moomy's B
By Jane Roge!
the can of asparagus about 20 min
utes, or until the tomatoes are very
soft, Then strain through a fine
sieve, pressing through as much of
the pulp as possible.
While this is cooking, soak the
gelatine in 34 cup of the pineapple
juice. Over this pour the hot tomato
juice, and stir until gelatine is dis
solved. Add remainder of pineapple
juice. Rinse mold in cold water,
place the asparagus tips in it in &
regular design, pour in a little of
the gelatine mixture and return to
the refrigerator to harden. As soon
as the mixture has set, add more of
the gelatine, continue adding small
quantities of the gelatine mixture
until the mold is full. Thus the
asparagus is kept on the bottom of
the mold which, when inverted, be
comes the top of the salad. Serve
on crisp lettuce with ‘'mayonnalse
or Louis Dressing. This will provide
from six to eight servings.
ARSI s
TSP R SR E
T AL B e
Rt Aty T S
RLR e ‘*%“Zgg%
P AT gL 3”"3’!«){-»' s “X&A N g
ELG ISR S B
s %?3'. o T R
il B e S
§ B 7 BT sSR
wEFE J} SRR R
AR i ey : e
g& (NG S T e
VAot Al e YA
s : Velar AR
S SAWG MR o
e e ‘
B X
B
Lt t :
i CRERREE bty iy
b e Y w*f?’«‘ G ey
B R ocngie NGO
3% oo R e WA i
¢ “ e .{s = A B
'y Mo S e e ) oAo
| 5 w’n‘it “vx ,é S B#fi £ & _,;g:;_:;«:?\
Ret TR
Gt By IR
ST 35 T B é“”"
A, | ‘*# eoL Rl
e- A
o kecd Eai f "'&kfl%;“;
| Boswwerds. @ w s
| @ik ';»;Ef vl RO T e
05, “’é . BT
0 T vey
] M A AN ey
1W" eARB el
LB iR S
RO e
|3 R R e A
B LR el
| S, IO L f i
| A S e B 1 g L
| e PL e GIC ii A SRS
PAR R s
i ..f?f»‘r_:;?@ R L n&fi? eAR
[ AT RO e S SRR
Ry o
e) S 505, 03 PR sl ,',j‘ .
| s ?&fifii‘":"; (::4; v ;;,?(-;"j% ,— 'w';‘:d‘a 7 o
R e G
i ‘@B“‘l’* 5k AR R R
| e RSR A SRR SRR
| Wide World Photo
| Varoff just after he had established
| a new pole vault record at Prince
| ton, New Jersey. ‘
George even sold his fellow athletes
%[ on his national beverage, the boys
| buying the pineapple juice in cans
| at stops on the way.
| Several years ago George Varoff
| matriculated at the University of
{Oregon. It is big Bill Hayward,
| track coach at the University of
| Oregon for 34 years, who is largely
| responsible for George's develop
i ment as a pole vaulter, Curlously
{ reminiscent of George’s early ex
| perience on the farm is one of the
exercises Coach Hayward pre
! scribes for his boys. To strengthen
i their fingers and arm muscles he
| has them carry in each coat pocket
aa tennis ball which they form the
;hahit of alternately squeezing and
i releasing, calling into play much the
{same use of the muscles a3 {8 in
! volved in milking a cow. @
| Jerald Oil (full strength) and apply
night and morning to the swollen, en
larged veins. Soon you should notice
that they are growing smaller and the
| treatment should be continued until the
'{veins are no longer troublesome. So
| penetrating and powerful is Emerald
1 Qi]l that old chronic sores and ulcers
| are often entirely healed.
For generous sample write
' R‘ngéaar;auonal übontofla.ln'-,
' A3, Resheniar N ¥y