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SOUTHERN PROSPERITY INCREASED BY NEW 7 IG
-METHODS DEVELOPED BY AGRICBi W LEK ,
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The South is considering today
more seriously than ever before
the conservation and utilization of i
its resources. Some of the activities |
directed toward these ends are eon- I
tained in a new motion picture |
‘‘The New South,” now being shown
by distributors of Arcadian Nitrate !
all over the South.
Typical of the trend is the devei-1
opment of a new agricultural sye I
tem. Formerly the general practice
was to cultivate a field for a ,-tioi:
period. When the production d, :
dined to the point where the yield
were hot profitable, the old land i
was abandoned, allowed to revert j
to forest, and new land was cleared, i
* Led by agricultural experts, the
farmers of the South have learned j
the wastefulness of such a method, i
and now utilize scientific means of I
increasing crop yield and at the |
same time preserving the fertility ■
New Holiday Yenu Suggestions
From Romantic Hawaii
gSY
Turkey garnished with giazed pir sapplc gems serve
hot punc 11 r :de f-■
contribution to hcl ' e* ■ e . -x.' on ’ lain’r;:•/.
HERE are two v tot r r
gestions from sunny 1: ..... p
that should rate a g E •fm :
holiday menu c I .
Serve a hot puny i pv. ' . -E
roast turkey. It nr.
Hawaii’s fay .rile be .
pie juice wh.. h ea b
in cans at your gr .■ ■ “ ■ < ■
natural, unswo ■ n
spiked with clove . I : . o
it a spicy tang.
If you like gar’ Jn ; <i
pretty, easy to t ■ ! < ..
well, garnish the 1. U
turkey with ■ : ’ , . :
—spoon sized ri; 1 ■ ■,
pierced with ci .
- Glazed I- -• n; ; • r
Pour CCE '.-.l < : <
can Haw,.; in
(spoon sized pi
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SeL Your
HOGS & COWS I
at |
Glenwood Livestock t.
Gl
Top Market Prices Assured
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WHEELER t fY
SINCE
SUNDAY AT V
The regular s- s r
Wheeler Co ent
ventinn w
school U lito ii s
of Alamo, just off paved ioaa(atj
lof the land. Chief of the modern
i tools is fertilizer nitrogen, produced
for the last ten years within the
| South itself —at the great Arcadian
i Niti 'te plant in Hopewell, Virginia.
Nitrogen satisfies grain’s urge to
| grow, and multiplier, greatly the
number of seed-bearing stalks. It
■ helps vegetable crops yield boun
! tifully, and enables fruit trees to
' produce the new' wood which bears
। the fruit. And it makes such pro
| duction possible on fewer acres,
thus decreasing the amount of land
exposed to destructive soil erosion.
Above all, the importance of ni
trogen lies in its effectiveness in
reducing crop production costs. Ni
trogen helps to make each acre,
and each hour of labor, more pro
ductive, and in this way works to
ward making Southern farming a
more profitable business.
,h< E ; . Em: Eil En tost all
sirup ;o . e, fruit.
Hoi Pin topple Punch
1 .
2 cups v. t»r
3 c- J .■^sweetened Hawaiian
Juil t cd i ktrrn
Wash oranges and stick with
cloves. Bring sugar and water Jo.a
boil cad mid oranges, cover and
simi r e until oranges are tender/
Remove crenges, .strain liquid in
'-h th .’ tfve been ;E mored,
: - ■ ;/• Ei? ‘to ■ boil. but not
or two to < cup.
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o.i .: i irvi ,d o t n
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1 Liquid - Tablets ■ SAWS-Now ■ Dbops
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- Let J V' our >5 A ?Lng
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Oar iri;- .s are i/ it - Work hiranteed |
S Letter-heads, Eave' >pes, St thMrviis, Cards. . f
Anvthh.;' ia ihe )?i A k nie
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Your business is -V tred
|| We would like to .L.i>t< >• M .EKWELL i
| Stapler -It PINS - MOKS - S APLES |
| Nodeskis *) n )!ee adth hl > • f i ?<e machines |
। Wheeler Comity Eagle - Alamo. |
a nci i m liiF’ a >
I V ■ LCrll 13 9 |
W All £ L.O.
• ■ $ CASH § PRICES ‘
Is Largh or Small Quantities |
HARTLEY & WRYE PECAN CO. g
ALAMO, GEORGIA
1 DCarjSfCW IMXKHS WWIKt Q I
36 Years on Hil Gamer
Succeeds by .. > " '■>■- '. -' *
Experience and Sound Judgment
By BASCOM TIMMONS
John N Garner would make a great I
President. He has a better practical un
derstanding of national Government
than any other living man. It is his-life, I
and has been for 38
years.
At the end of the
three dozen years
under the Capitol
dome he is, accord
ing to the calendar, y
70 years old, Off the ,
calendar he is 50
years old anti in tip
top physical condi
tion. This vigor and l ,
physical toughness ;
he would carry into a
the greatest office ‘
within the gift of s
the people and he
would have the
z. OH
extra 20 years of knowledge of affairs,
domestic and foreign. He came to his
present place of eminence the hard way.
In his public setvice there is rio problem
of Government with which he has not
grappled.
Garner would make a great'President
because he has the proper temperament
for the office. He knows when to advance
and when to halt and take stock. He un- ,
derstahds the Nation’s legislative and ।
administrative digestic ' system better
than any man in the country. He would '
1 E no outpr ts he could not hold. He
would be the best insurance against re
action, which so often follows unwise
action. He has the poise and the patience
to work for permanency. He would in- ,
sist on sound legislation and coherent ■,
administration. ,
* * * •
Best Judge of People's Temper
He is probably the best judge of the
temper of the people and their .repre
sentatives in Congress, at any given
time, of any man in the United States.
He has an uncanny perspective, which
w abr - him to disregard the clamor of
voluble and vociferous minorities and
find the desires of the submerged ma
j uity. Perhaps this because be Is a ‘
typical American, neither radical nor
reactionary, but prog vs and for
ward-looking. ,' .
Garner would make a great. President .
brnausd of his gifts of leadership and
his judgment of and ability to work wjth 1
n ■ H ■ ! of: n oi'! that mos! men !
.ere me:; of ■
good will, patriotically interested In the ”
welfare of their country He has always
। found a zest in sitting down with men :
who review problems from diverse ■
angles, men of different experm oes. He 1
believes that out of such deliberations ’
£ ound pra tical, benefle 1 and 1
progressive solutions. He takes to such
counsel tables his own fidelity to prin- 1
cii/ r 3. clarity, of reasoning and ability <
to get at facts.
p | His judgment of men is excellent. ■ 1
When he became Speaker, in 1931. he H
demonstrated his ability to choose men i >
for important assignments —of finding |’
the proper man to do a job. Mc-n were ; ‘
placed in roles for which they were best i
quaiificY. ile has always liked to rcwai d ; *
merit in young men, and this gave him | •'
the opportunity. Although the De nocraY i t
had a fragile majority of only three votes ; r
overnight, he welded them jnto a eo- *
j hesive, fighting organization.
,»* * ♦ I
- I Far-Flung Network of Contacts J
Because his acquaintanceship in all I'
■> pa: ts of the country is s' cord jo none, 1.:
bc-iievethis far-flung neE’.'oi'k of contia: t
and knowledge of men would make it
p- able for Garner to call :nh> -.ervxr. .
m n of old. landing abj'uy l r h:: c.-.1
net and other administra. '.e a: res. His
standard for judicial appauiln/ : wuuir! iz
be high. He would be e*ace.ally anxxu:-. t
to find proper men for diplomatic mists, r
t HI long experience on the House For- | (
eign Affairs Committee imbued him with |
i
5
I a deep and informed interest in interna
tional relations.
I That. Gar. r considers the solution of
| the unemployment and agricultural
I p ’. bleuw as the two outstanding chal
le: les to the Union and that the chief
attention of a Garner administration
would be bent to this end, no one who
knows him doubts. He lilies to tackle
t ugh problems, and here are two tough
ones.
« * « *
Opr cd to Government in Business
If any one is .supporting Garner on the
theory be would a do-nothing Presi
dent, that 'mimori: r would better begin
Idbkmg fur a new man to support. Ill;
would be a heads-up administration He
believes modern government must meet
modern needs. He has said that "evolu
tionary proce- : mu d go forward to meet
ever-changing human needs.” lie would
-.ot have the Government evade any
legitimate function, but he would be
. nl< i in liis eridi aver to co it did not
encroach on functions outside its field.
"Putting the Government into business
is a violation of the Nation's industrial
and commercial fabric,” he declared in
his 1932 acceptance speech.
Garner would make a great President
because he thoroughly believes in our
democratic system of three branches of
Government. He has been called con
gressional-minded. It is true he has
fought invasion of the prerogatives of
Cosgrc-ss, but lie is just as (Irmly against
tre pas; against the executive and judi
cial branches.
Believing as he does in a Government
of laws and not of men, he abhors unnec
eswry bureaucracy and would undoubt
edly seek to dissolve some of it entirely,
put back in Congress some of the legis
lative powers it exercises, back in the
courts ?ome of the judicial powers it
or ipics, and back in the Stales some of
the loch! powers that belong there. All
th,- would preserve natural dignity
of the executive branch, rather than
weaken it.
Garner,believes, as did Grover Cleve
land, that the whole art of government is
simply applied common sense and com
mon honesty, with reason, justice and
tolerance as handmaidens.
♦ • * «
Has Vivid "Sense of Humanity”
Gamer as President would be guided by
a sense of humanity. It war he who intro
duced the first general relief bill in 1932
It wm a pay-as-you-go measure, and
ear; led a tax to pay its cost. He believes
ip an ever-Increasing standard o' living
for the working man and woman. He
has a passionate devotion for the well
being of men, and women who work for
their daily bread. He has always fought
monopoly and the concentration of
we Uh. and has insisted Hurt the Govern
mc hy down rules to guarant. etr
and fs . competition. He is for property
-ausr he belie res them the very
human rights. Ownership of
pi-... ■: ly. be tl.ii.ks, is ose of the best
guarantees of the dignity and independ
ence of the individual. He is against
favoritism in law enforcement.
Garner knows you cannot get some
thing for nothing. He believes in con
structive economy. He i: the imlestructi
ble pioneer type who h ’sme in a pio
nec- c intry how hold it is to make
a dollar. He would be scrupulously
careful; with the to; ■;ayu': dollar. He
has the'Courage to resist fantastic pro
posals and boldly to meet an issue.
To continued efforts to find solutions
of 14,c .‘.ion’s problems Gar: er would
tn •' to the presidency va t experience
"Experience,” to para phrase the great
Justice Holmes, "is the life of adminis
tration.”
Garner loves his country, believes In
it, knows it is durable and wants it to
believe in itself. He wants Government
to do its part toward prdset v:, - freedom
of opportunity. He believes economy,
thrift anti self-reliance are still the hall
mark of the majority of Americans.
(Rei s -ol through courtesy of the North i
American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) i
Q OS g<yJSSS3®I
Bascom Timmons
-mrlzirl rfa r\f 'ifTnino
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gv .h bevr/figew to serve
k.” with y, tp r thi” rookies or fruit
rtv : iw.y - ir. c?. tnavd when
friends drop in Luing .the winter
holiday eerEon. A ttipply of canned
unswoytened Hawaiian pineapple
frig^raicr i.r papuy for just such
oe • ...ill delight your family
* * ♦
Pineav 1 > nog is a refreshing,
bubbly drink that will please the
children, and it’s so eafey to make
>i . v . c n pretinre ii themselves
b’.y' the .following directions: Beat
S^^^dlks until thick and creamy.
Add three labhspoons sugar and
continue i.- beat. Combine 2 table
spoon-. 1. ncn juice, 2 tablespoons
o. ....... (j un .
sweetened iiiwaikui pineapple
juice, a: .! a gradually to egg
yolks, beating- all the while. Fold
in 3 egg whites which have been
beaten, utud st .if but not dry. Pour
in<.o gl. as. Top each serving with
. grated nutmeg.
Fruit juices and eggs should be
very cold.
Yield: G —B-ounce glasses.
‘ —
s from Noiv
ft
■ ■: “ci • • . ■ ion" o'
i- ' ' ■ -i- 'i!!’ buoy now an-
• i ii'd content;; ol
•" io inchn’e micro I
id ■ n pft-uire film
' k of the 70H;
c.e <■'!: ! - o • of the 20th
‘I
'■ •( i tied-' of i
■w York World’s!
nh ■. ' : i ■ ■ <■, Ihe .
’ 'i" ” < .’ . -J ;• •
tu;en of u;j.. d. . , y 'of the Foil '
A, A-ny Bridge Table
— By Jane Rogers
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Nibble cnS .. Liy thin Is the motto <
fo.ti. ’. n r rycsts v.R.r ; rcfruit
O’ .1 . .-.
A CANDY to dry t > woman |
rl > ■
by cool ■ ■
of t’ '■ p..- I in r ,■ . mad.; I
of ii - .. ‘ - pDjr apply : and I
sugar The r> ■1 ■ j ; ;> '.i-f.r ■ I
easily < .... ’ ■.
add c.n :) i. ■ i ;,<:>■ : 3 ;i ,i / i
and id)' V. I..’G !1- :n' i ; ;; iy J-. ; cat
i- *
J Candida Gr^ni-ult Peri
nv ..■ . : . ' ■ >... Glen niiito I
and y ’e. ,■ : I; ; d, >.:id . d Lnt-j . . 11, n |
about t...'. . inches long and three
eighths of an inch wide. Place rind in
a kettle a#.d cover with cold water. ‘.
- .a 1 LTzaw
.. ... ... ... - ■ , ,
' Yr-rXfi in Businew
- ’ z C. E. Johnston
t-'c .a. Schools of Busineu
• ■lern,:tio»al Correspondence
Schools
-squs about to enter
fill into two broad
who have a definite
a particular field of
old if. at all possible
in this or related
Who are adaptable
v i. hiii ceriain limits
- . ii-y. of positions equally
i latter type of man or
: ould consider fields of en
. n-<'not well known and
thcie i , therefore, a rela
of well trained workers.
i 1 rson seriously considers
11, however, he should
iliat there are sources of
- ’ available to supplement
.. na? l ion which will be re
in the job. Traffic manage
ri may be mentioned as an ex
;de of tills type of work.
de iiia! and commercial organ!-
/ lions of all kinds employ traffic
men to deal with transportation
impauies and to assure that ade
ate transportation services are
available at rates that are reason
able and technically correct. These
re < i-ieirmust know the kinds of
■ rendered by all types of
carrii is. ■. i
rallic men are also employed by
lK- •importation companies to obtain
;-Yi • . ills of goods to be trans
it .-I al with rate and traffic
• : . and to attend to traffic
•ci that are brought before
e ny uiatory commissions, the
i-state Commerce Commission,
>th , federal administrative
s engaged in transportation
regulation.
Happy New Year
Y;.
A A
j .-
an I lin grounds, and theme cen
are attracting wide attention.
11l hit the apportionment of
i 1 : >im Folks’ Dollar” shown
i n !i the use of a symbolic ail-
< r dollar, behind which animated
of men appear; and the dis
hi of Arcadian Nitrate, which
a ma;i with lighted zones,
I fn 'ht trains and a steam
to bring home its message. A
■ ■ plements the display,
v । il economic data; and
nlin: color prn’pction
i ion piclnres complete the
nseroble. ■ »” f •
bridge playing hostess who
<;d in pineapple juice In-
. to a boil and boil for
Drain and repeat
Rinse peel with cold
i drain thoroughly. Make
' 1 cup of Hawaiian
to one cup of sugar.
boil and boil for *
n'.< bi-iore adding peel.
.> i rould j. it cover the peeh
I boil and then
u i heal 1.~• ; sirup will simmer
siy Cook until skins become
d rd 1.; absorbed all the
1 I peel on a tray
d paper to dry •
; roll each strip
ir One cup of
■ -i ‘ r cup of juice^win
make enough sirup to cover the
peel from two grapefruit of medium
size (about 2 cups of fruit ywl). ;