Newspaper Page Text
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(COOL ELECTRIC COOKERy\
( FOR LESS THAN EVER )
\ON THE NEW LOW RATES! J
1 he new Westinghouse Electric Range is a I^l
beauty if you ever saw one. It’s the cleanest, cool-
eat kind of range! Cooks in jig time. Cuts cooking
costs to the bone. Saves you time and energy. (j \ /
Better come to our store and buy yours during the / \
Bummer sale and save. Pay for it on easy terms.
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cash and old stove L/ 1 • \ \
Georgia Power Company
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Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.)
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Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.)
(M. C. Hartley Agent, Alamo.
S.&W. LAUNDRY
DUBLIN, GA.
SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE
WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED
IN ALAMO ON MONDAY, WEDNESDAY
AND FRIDAY
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Wheeler County Eagle, Alamo, Georgia June 16 1939
SHERIFF SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
Will be sold before the court
house door in said county on the first
Tuesday in July, 1939, between the
legal hours for sale for eash to the
highest bidder one acre of land in
lot of land number 71 in the 11th land
district of said county described,-
Beginning at a point on the South
east side of United States highway
13.86 chains from the intersection of
the Southeast side of said highway
and the northeast line of said lot Os
land, and running along the South
east side of said highway 73 1-2
degrees West a distance of 3.l6chains,
thence South 16. 1-2 degrees East 3.16
chains; Thence run North 73 1-2
degrees East, 3.16 chains; thence run
South 16.1-2 degrees West 3.l6chains,
on the South side of said highway to
point of beginning. Levied on and
will be sold as the property of Mrs,
C. E. Hinson, to satisfy afi. fa. issued
from the Justice’s court of the 1450th
district G. M. in favor of H. N. Sears,
Sheriff, for use (;of Joe Coney, and
against said Mrs. C. E. Hinson and
Cleon Brown as defendants.
This the Bth day of June, 1939.
H. N. SEARS, Sheriff.
CITATION
GEORGIA, Wheeler County.
To Al) Whom It May Concern:
Neal T. Clark having in proper
form applied to me for Permanent
Letters of Administration on the es
tate of Mrs. S. E A. Clark, late of
said County, this is to cite all and
singular the creditors and next of kin
jof .Mrs. S. E. A. Clark to be and
1 appear at my office within the time
j allowed by law, and show cause, if
■ any they can, why permanent admin-
I inistration should not be granted to
j Neal T. Clark on Mrs. S. E. A. Clarkes
estate.
W illness my hand and official
signature, this sth day of June 1939.
W. O. HARRELSON, Ordinary.
Hints For Motorists
By Joseph R. Rollins
The Atlantic Refining Company
WHEN replacing .a bulb in a
headlight or other lamp it is a
good idea to coat the base of the
bulb with flake graphite. This will
prevent the bulb fvom corroding
and sticking in the socket. Also, if
you wipe a little vaseline around
the joint between the body of the
headlight ami the. >im, it will-help
keep eut water, and at the same
time make it easier to remove the
lens.
« » •
If you have carburetor trouble
that is not traceable to the usital
sources, the main metering jet of
the carburetor may be at fault. An
enormous amount of gasoline passes
through this little part in the
course of a year and sometimes it
breaks down under the load, in
some cases it has been found cut
clean off.
I Save ^oney And Sat
I Comfortable Shaves With
| This to
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^At 1 ^ Price!
B jeaA.e e Skin
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® Tv TOW for you men who want
■ XN a bang-up razor blade at
■ low price... here’s a value that’s
B real! Thin Gillettes cost only
H 10c for 4 and give you quick,
■ easy, good-looking shaves every
■ time. Made of easy-flexing steel
■ with edges of a«i entirely new
■ kind, they out-perform and out
“ i ■ last misfit blades two to one.
i i ■ Buy a package from your dealer.
B mi u mm mw ■v.'sy
Few«r Typi»t» Needed
A teletype consists of two or more
typewriters electrically connected so
that when a message Is typed on one
machine It Is reproduced simultane
ously on all other machines connected I
* tn the system.
DOG>OIHTERSJ
fc" << • i— •' —f
PALS
When I see a boy who hasn’t a dog.
Or a dog that hasn’t a boy—
I think of the lot they are missing
Os frolic and genuine joy.
Some parents think dogs are a nuisance?
Just something to bark and annoy— I
They can’t know how badly a boy needs
a dog I
Or how sadly a dog needs a boy,
—May Norton Morris.
* • •
When deciding on a dog lor the
home, all breeds should receive careful
consideration. For apartments and city
homes a small breed is usually best.
One usually tires of a large dog in close
quarters. Also, close confinement is
unfair to a large dog.
♦ * »
In the suburbs or rural districts a
large dog is fine, providing he can get
out and roam around or be given a good
romp every day. Especially excellent
with young children are the big slow •
acting breeds such as St. Bernards or
Great Danes. No companion is finer
for a growing boy or girl from seven on
up than a big, rollicking dog.
“Your Dog, His Care and Training"
published by the Ralston Purina Com
pany, deals with such problems as
teaching the puppy where to sleep,
arrangements for puppy outside, house
breaking your puppy, how to remove
spots on. rugs, teething and chewing
things, feeding and immunizing, the
right kind of bed, daily exercise, riding
in,cars, brushing and bathing, clipping
and trimming, how not to have puppies,
dog psychology.
* • •
H. P. Owens, famous dog trainer of
St. Louis, kindly worked with Purina
Mills on the chapter of "Your Dog,
His Care and Training” titled “Training
and Teaching Tricks." Mr. Owens has
devised an unusual aid for teaching and
training dogs. It works wonders in the
hands of a novice as well as in more
experienced hands.
♦ • *
To obtain a personal copy of “Your
Dog, His Care and Training,” mail the
coupon envelope that is found in each
bag of Dog Chow, to the Ralston Purina
Company, St. Louis, Mo., enclosing ten
cents. Promptly the book w>U be sent.
A ■
♦ ♦ *
While looking at puppies, don’t pass
up the females. They usually cost less,
are just as hearty, and, if anything, are
more devoted and kinder with children.
They are easy to keep at home. Danger
of their getting puppies comes only
twice a year and can be guarded
against by keeping them shut up for a
few days while in season. Too, a good
female dog offers the pleasure of some
time raising a litter of puppies.
* * *
Insist on getting papers on a pure
bred dog before final payment is made.
To obtain papers, it is necessary to have
the pedigree for three generations
back, signed by the owner of the bitch
at the time she is bred. Ako obtain a
filled out and signed application for
registry from the seller, to file with
the American Kennel Club. If the dog
is already registered, ask for his certi
ficate and a transfer blank so you can
have him transferred to your name. To
tal cost is around $2.
* * *
Vitamin G is a growth vitamin and
an abundance of it aids a sturdy, vig
orous growth in pups. A new, rich
; ourcc of this growth vitamin—Puri-
Flave, has just been developed by
science, This new ingredient is now in
Dog Chow to assure puppies getting
plenty of Vitamin G.
* * *
Two common misbeliefs about dogs
alre that mad dogs refuse to drink water
and that every dog that foams at the
mouth has rabies. "Neither is cor
rect,” says A. H. Leonard, head of the
Dog Department of Purina Mills. "Dogs
may be foamy at the mouth from any
one of a dozen trivial causes, from
slight Indigestion through more serious 1
troubles. And dogs that refuse to drink
water are not so likely to be mad as
they are to be just not thirsty. In
neither of the two forms of rabies—
excited rabies or dumb (paralyzed)
rabies—do dogs have fits or convul
sions.”
» » »
Fits in dogs may show up at any
time as a result of distemper, worms,
and continued feeding of an improper
ration. Not one dog in a thousand
accused of having rabies really has the
disease. Dogs with excited rabies will
be playful at the start of the disease
and crave attention and petting. Later
the bark will get lower in tone and the
dog will become uneasy and seek dark
eorners in which to hide. Later they <
lose recognition of their owners and
are likely to attack any animal or per- ]
son who comes within range. <
* » »
I
Dogs afflicted with dumb rabies lose '
jocntrol of the epiglottis through 1
P*rHy»is and cannot swallow. *
Hints For Motorists
By Joseph R. Rollins
The Atlantic Refining Company
IF you are confronted with the
necessity of removing a tire from
the wheel you may be able to save
yourself a lot of pounding, prying
and heaving by using a little water
as a loosener. Lay the wheel flat
on the ground and pour the water
around the rim where It is la con
tact with the tire. After a few min
utes the tire can usually be loos
ened by pressing down on it with
your foot.
* * ♦
Sometimes a leak in a tire valve
is due to the fact that the small
prongs at the inner end are not
spread far enough apart. When the
prongs are not spread sufficiently
they don’t bend on the ridge inside
the stem, and they may bind on the
valve spindle.
Viciou» Chela
A vicious circle ts a term of le.
that is applied to a form of arguti.. ■.
tatlon In which the conclusion is !•
tually used to establish the premi. t
and then the premise ts used to pro; <
the conclusion. It Is sometli’us >
’erred to as "reasoning In a H>
Years from Now
Five thousand years from now,
archeologists will dig deeply into
the groumls of the New York
World's Fair 1939, unearth a metal
cylinder 7 feet in length, and dis
cover within it a “cross-section" of
tod । y Scientists nre busy now as
setnbling the varied contents ot
this receptacle, to include micro
scopic books, small articles of or
ery (lay use and motion picture film
which will tell people of the 70lh
century how those of the 20th
looked, dressed anil behaved
When unique methods of publt
cizlng tlio Fall are discussed in
6939 A.l> the New York World’s
Fair 1939 Pre View on Wheels and
Southern Motorcade will undoubt
edly come to the fore. This Show
on Wheels, sponsored by the distrib
utors of Arcadian Nitrate, tin
American Soda is the epitome ot
modern salesmanship. It. is now
touring 368 Southern communities.!
bringing Io each an advance show
Ing of the marv-'ls of the Fair ii
diorama form. The educational fea
tures of this display of the Fair |
Apprentice Training Has Appeal •
For Young Workers in the South
> W:'. « 'iTWs'
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T m ■ ■ ••«<•• - ■ icv:'
• Brickmason Apprentice Receiving Instruction '
*
APPRENTICE training has be
come an important feature of
many large industrial plants in the
United States. One of the latest
programs of this nature which aims
at providing an adequate supply of
skilled workers, has been launched
by the Tennessee Coal, Iron and
Railroad Company in Birmingham,
Ala. The program consists of a
four-year course and is designed to
train young men as all-around,
skilled journeymen in their respec
tive crafts. At present approxi
mately sixty apprentices are en
rolled. c,
• The instruction schedules cover
fourteen trades. The time of the
apprentice is divided between the
shop where ho obtains practical ex-
"Here Lies the Jinx”
A wooden cross with the words, I
“Here lies the jinx,’’ marks the
center of a small burial plot at the
Buckhorn mine, 60 miles northwest
of Eureka, Ariz. Miners at the camp
buried their “jinx,” a piece of
broken mining machinery that
caused them considerable trouble,
in a fenced-in grave in a conspicU'
ous place.
WHEELER COUNTY HGL E
*1.50 A Year, In Advance
FFICIAL ORGAN WHEELER CO
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
■I AUK B. GRtISS Publisher
Entered at the Post Office at Alamo
Georgia, as second class mail matter
May IGth, 191.”, under Act of March
3rd, 1879.
Subscription Rates
12 Months $1.50
6 Months 75c
In Advance
'ARD of THANKS; Resolutions
.Obituary, Notices of Entertain
inents where an admission is to
■be charged or other notices net
if general news value will be
< barged for at the rate of one
I lent a word. Money must aecom
’ piny copy in all cases.
- N ■l&’l |T I t
buildings, grounds, and theme cen
ter are attracting wide attention,
i They are the apportionment of
"The Home Folks’ Dollar” shown
i through the use ot a symbolic sil
: ver dollar, behind which animated
! figures of men appear; and the dis
tribution of Arcadian Nitrate, which
! employs a map with lighted zones,
j 'miniated freight trains and a steam
ship to bring home its message. A
; lecturer supplements the display,
giving vital economic data; and
. ound recordings, color projection
and motion pictures complete the
| ensemble.
perience, and the class room where
he studies a course related to his
craft, supplied by the International
Correspondence Schools. Study
courses cover such trades as me
chanical drawing, mathematics,
blue print reading and construction
design. Shop work and the related
study work are coordinated so each
will supplement the other.
Apprentices must be between 17
and 24 years when enrolled. They
must be graduates of a high school
or vocational school, or must pos
sess an equivalent educational
background.
Apprentice applicants are re
quired to stand aptitude tests and
to measure up to a high standard
of physical and mental fitness be
fore being selected for training.
Causes of Anemia
Anemia may be caused by any con
dition which interferes with normal
health or depletes the body reserves.
Not only the blood but all of the body
cells are affected in anemia. Local
ami general Infections, cancer,
Bright’s disease, and nutritional dis
turbances are common causes of
anemia.