Newspaper Page Text
Mrs. W. F. Norris and Mr. William
Norris spent Wednesday in Albany.
» • *
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hall spent the
week-end in Panacea Springs, Fla.
* » »
Col. E. L. Smith, of Albany, spent
a short while here Tuesday.
• • *
We have a few 2%-bushel bags
Brabham Peas in stock which we
are closing out at $5.00 per bag.—
TWITTY FEED & SEED STORE, Ca
milla, Ga.
• » *
Mr. J. H. Milward, of Albany, was
in town for a short while Tuesday
morning on business.
» * »
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hall left Tues
day morning for Indian Springs, near
Forsyth, for a few days vacation.
* • *
Miss Virginia Forsyth, of Cairo,
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Cheek last week.
* * *
Miss Margaret Hudson is the guest
of Mrs. Ernest Sanders in Tabor City,
N. C. this week.
» » •
A-l is the guaranteed Screw Worm
remedy. It will kill the worms, heal
the wound and keep the flies away.
Try it.—TWITTY FEED & SEED
STORE, Camilla, Ga.
Hana airsnm ammnarant ■wenaw
SATURDAY
“Honor Os The West”
—with—
Bob Baker
MONDAY—I DAY ONLY
Double Feature
“Lady’s From
Kentucky”
—with—
George Raft and Ellen Drew
—and—
‘Sweepstakes Winner’
—with—
Marie Wilson, Joan Davis
Allan Jenkins
TUESDAY—I DAY ONLY
“Confessions Os A
Nazi Spy”
—with—
Edw. G. Robinson and Francis
Lederer
Dime Day Wednesday Dime Day
“Panama Lady”
—with—
Lucille Ball - Allan Lane
THURSDAY—I DAY ONLY
Double Feature
“Some Like It Hot”
Gene Kruppa and Orch.
Shirley Ross - Bob Hope
—and—
“Kid From Kokomo”
—with—
Wayne Morris and Pat O’Brien
FRIDAY—I DAY ONLY
“The Jones Family In
Hollywood” -
—with—
The Jones Family
Let
The Baker County
News
Do Your Printing And Job Work,
Letterheads, Bills, Statements,
Office And Personal Stationery.
Superior Work And
Reasonable Prices
Leave Orders With Miss Alma Ellis, Court House,
Newton, Georgia
THE BAKER COUNTY
NEWS
NEWTON, - GEORGIA
Locals and
Personals
Mr. Roy Salter, Dr. E. M. Harris
and Mr. Kent Jones are in Atlanta
this week on business.
* » »
Mrs. E. H. Cheek is the guest this
week of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hunter at Young Harris, Ga.
Mr. Robert S. Hudson was the guest
of Mrs. A. N. McLeod for the week
end. He left Tuesday night for New
York World’s Fair.
• • •
Mrs. R. L. Hall, Miss Sarah Hall
and Miss Mattie Lee Hall attended the
picture show in Camilla Wednesday
afternoon.
* * »
Mrs. James Forrester, of Leesburg,
Mrs. Virginia Bowen and Mrs. R. L.
Hall, Jr. were the guests of Mrs. C.
H. Hall Thursday.
» » »
After you have wormed and vac
cinated your pullets follow it with
Avi Tone, the conditioner. It wilt
prepare them for a season of heavy
production.—TWlTTY FEED & SEED
STORE, Camilla, Ga.
* » »
Mrs. Harry Darby and daughters,
Nellie and Hazel, of Tallahassee, Fla.,
are the guests of Mrs. A. N. McLeod
this week.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Sapp and Mrs.
Sapp’s sister, Mrs. Howard Holton,
and daughter, Dorothy, spent last
week at Miami Beach, Fla.
* * *
After you have wormed and vac
cinated your pullets, and they have
started laying a few eggs, put them
on Champion Laying Mash. It will
produce the eggs.—TWITTY FEED
& SEED STORE, Camilla, Ga.
* * *
Mr. Byron Edwards and Mr. Les
lie Edmonds, of Cairo, spent a few
days in Atlanta and North Alabama
this week. *
* * *
Mrs. C. C. Merritt and daughter,
Miss Katherine Merritt, and Mrs. Dan
Miller spent Wednesday morning in
Albany shopping.
* * *
Now is the time to plant your Pansy
seed. We have just received a ship
ment of Burpees Trimardeau, mixed
colors. They will please you.—TWIT
TY FEED & SEED STORE, Camilla,
Ga.
* * *
Mr. Talmadge Powell, of Fort My
ers, Fla., Mrs. Elma Andrews, Misses
Edna and Claire Fisk and Lula Jane
West spent the week-end at Tybee
Beach. Misses Fisk and West re
mained over for the week.
* * *
Miss Nell Higgs was called to
Moultrie Sunday morning on account
of the serious illness of her father
who was in .the hospital there. She
returned to Newton Tuesday, her
father was much improved.
» * »
There are a few poultrymen that
have not wormed and vaccinated their
pullets as yet. It is much cheaper and
better to vaccinate than to let them
have Fowl Pox just when they should
begin to lay.—TWITTY FEED &
SEED STORE, Camilla, Ga.
Home And Family Life
BY MOTHER
BUDGETING OURSELVES
In last week’s “News” 1 wrote to
the whole family about budgeting the
family income. Then I pick up the
state papers this week and I see that
the tobacco markets are about to close
because tobacco is bringing so little.
Seems like the family isn’t going to
have much money to bother over—
but whether we have much money or
no money we still have ourselves left ■
on our hands and sometimes we are (
SOMETHING to manage. So this
week I am going to write on Budget
ing Ourselves.
Every individual, great or small,
rich or poor, wise or foolish—has
three possessions—TlME, ENERGY,
MONEY. We.may use these miserably
or extravagantly in our daily lives,
accomplishing great things or nothing
at all. And here is how they work.
A man has very little money—but
he is strong of body and mind; his
health is good; we say he is full of
energy, “raring to go.” He also pos
sesses twenty-four hours a day—we
all have that to use or abuse as we
wish. This man is rich—he uses his
body to do work which money and
machinery cannot possibly do and his
mind to create ideas which no robot,
no matter how efficient can create.
Doesn’t this very thought fill you
with a desire to do something? I
thing most of us go that far—we all
want to do something but that is just
where many of us arrive—at the
wishing gate. Only a few—a very
few push open the gate and go in
| —really let themselves out. The vast
I majority of us think that because we
(have no money we have nothing—
but I tell you we still have ourselves
and time—time and energy!
I’m not much good in math but
those figures used in geometry to
prove something sort of intrigue me
—triangles, squares, rectangles and
spheres. Take the triangle for in
stance and make all the sides equal
—get out your pencil and draw one
if you will. Put the words money,
time, energy on each of the three
sides and see what a strong, steady
looking contraption you have. Tumble
it in your imagination, in any direc
tion and no matter how it falls it is
solid and substantial. That, we may
say, is our ideal life of wealth—an
equal amount of Time, Energy and
| Money. Most of life triangles are
| not so perfect. I see them all about
me—lopsided, but still standing if the
strong side is the base. By the side
of the perfect triangle draw some
others; keep on drawing until you
have made your own triangle pat
tern, and see how you stand in pos
sessions.
For example, my own triangle looks
like this: The “Money” side is very
short, too short to support the tri
angle which has fallen over on the
side marked “Time.” The “Energy”
line is a little longer than the money
side but not so long as Time. So
here it is—l have all the time in the
world, with a fair amount of energy
but very little money. What will I
do with this‘arrangement? Well, I
have to do most of my own work. It
may take me longer to do it, because
I do not have energy enough to work
hard or fast, but 1 will get it done
eventually and it has not cost me any
money—but it has saved the money
I had and now as I turn my triangle
it more nearly looks like the ideal.
Do you see how it works ? Do you
see how you can change your state of
wealth ?
What has all this to do with Budget
ing Ourselves? Simply this. Money
is not the only thing one has to bud
getz Time and energy are equally as
important—and yet most of us think
only in terms of money. If we were
as frugal with our time and energy
as we are with the money we deposit
in the bank maybe we would all get
somewhere. But no, we sit around
(wasting energy), waiting (killing
time) for money to drop in our laps.
I’ve lived a good many years and I
never saw money drop from anywhere
—not even from Washington—it takes
energy to work for it and time to ac
cumulate it and then and only then
may one sit down and use it to save
himself.
How may one use his time and en
ergy to best advantage?
Just as 1 suggested last week that
the greatest value received from
money is to make a PLAN for using
it—so I would like to suggest that
you start with a plan for using your
time and energy.
Some home makers get up early
and wear themselves out before break
fast. Wouldn’t it be better if they
understood their strength and planned
to use it so it would last all day?
Maybe it would be better economy to
have a few labor-saving devices or
reorganize the household tasks so that
someone else shared the work. Where
there are several children in the fam
ily each child could help with the du
ties. It not only helps the child to
learn to take responsibility but it ।
holds the family together with a spirit I
of cooperation. One young girl I i
know says she learned more from her
mother about life and living while
they washed dishes together than she
has from college courses in psychol
ogy. She had a wise mother and she
is a wise daughter! They made their
work play by sharing it and that gave
them time to visit together.
I have no set formula or recipe for
making up a time and energy sched
ule. There are efficiency experts who
have made various motion studies of
household duties, who tell us we
should make a bed in so many mo
tions and so few minutes—just as fac
tory workers are timed for jobs. To
me this takes something out of the
joy of home-making — makes our
homes more like factories but this is
far better than those who have no
plan at all, just hap-hazard, hit-amiss,
happy-go-lucky home makers who are
always tired to death at the end of
the day and although they have been
busy “every minute,” can’t see a thing
they have done. Somewhere between
these two extremes is a place we may
reach by intelligent planning—a more
or less flexible plan for doing the
tasks that must be done each day,
i each week, or each season. This sort
|of planning gets us somewhere and
leaves us time and energy to enjoy
our homes and families at the end of
the day.
No homemaker can manage this
problem alone without the cooperation
of others in the family. For a baby
, or a daddy or a boy or girl to take
' more of his mother’s time and energy
than duly belongs to him is just as bad
as taking change from the family
al(gt. To be late to meals or ap
pointments or to hold up some house
i hold operation, throws the whole plan
i out of balance, and like a train off
| schedule is likely to cause a wreck,
! ending in loss of life and property
damage.
What are you doing to make the
most of your time and energy to pro
duce the most efficient and happy
home for your family? What are you
teaching the growing boys and girls
in your family about the wise use of
time and talent—which is another way
of saying energy?
Miss Mary Ann Adkins, who is in
training at Piedmont Hospital in At
lanta, is spending her vacation at
home with her mother, Mrs. Toy Ad
kins in Elmodel. She is the guest
of Mrs. I. M. Cox for a few days this
week.
S®S2)®S) O<SOO Facts That Concern You n°. io ofa^ri^
! he's §©
SUS AS HE HjK^yi
WAS! IN 1932 U
I • HE WAS THIS BIG--* 11
-—IOWIR
TODAY. ^WI chop \
Before re-legalization,the farmer wIIB
I HAD A TWO MILLION DOLLAR YEARLY |W IN
MARKET FOR HIS BEER CROPS. gs tfj^Q Fl
TODAY, BEER RAYS ONE HUNDRED Bf 7WB
MILLION DOLLARS ANNUALLY FOR ITS V # j WB
CROPS. BEER CROP-LANDS WOULD COVER B J /B
I ALMOST ALL THE FARM AREA OF FIVE B . j /|
NEW ENGLAND STATES-3,000,000 ACRES I f J®|| ^|B
( ALSO-BEER PAYS A MILLION DOLLARS A W JF 1g f/ B
IZ DAY IN TAXES AND MAKES A MILLION JOBS Qu MF A T i
1/^ AND NOW, TO KEEP BEERS MANY BENEFITS, BM^TO W. J
11/ ff FOR YOU AND FOR THEM, AMERICA'S If I "
IKm BREWERS WANT TO HELP KEEP BEER BbMH^I Wil
RETAILING- AS WHOLESOME AS BEER B WwEl IrVW
ITSELF. THEIR PROGRAM WILL INTEREST ■ Ki \ : 0
LOCAL LAW AUTHORITIES... AND YOU. BW^^B
MAY WE SEMO YOU THE FACTS?
For free booklet, addrett: United Brewers Indue-
Um trial Foundation, 19 East 40 th St., New York, N. Y r
BEER... a beverage of moderation
DO YOU KNOW—
RdJ
'that the sun has sufficient
energy generated to con
tinue to keep us warm for
about fifteen-trillion more
years. It has also been de
termined that there are
about 30,000,000 stars in
the universe or about 20
times as many as there are
people on the earth.
Trachoma Widespread Eye Disease
Trachoma is one of the mos\ wide
spread of all eye diseases. Persons
who acquire the infection develop
thick, granulated eyelids, a white
film over the eye and inability to
open the eyes in strong light
Men Fear Themselves
“It is by seeking to inspire fear
in others,” said Hi Ho, the sage of
Chinatown, “that men have learned
to fear themselves ”
Rice on Contra nano cist
When France had a sort of war
with China in the .year 1884, the
French put rice on the contraband
list.
We Invite Your Account
On the basis of the satisfaction which several thousand
customers are experiencing in their banking connections
with us, we cordially invite you to place your bank ac
count with us.
Modern banking in all of its helpful phases.
THE CITY NATIONAL BANK
ALBANY, .-. GEORGIA
Deposits Insured Up to $5,000.00
MARES
We have just received shipment of nice young mares
suitable for farm work and breeding. Some with colts
and some in foal. We also have some nice young mules.
See us at once if you want to buy or trade.
J. C. & W. C. HOLMAN
MULE COMPANY
ALBANY, GEORGIA
BLAKELY, GA. MOULTRIE, GA.
Mrs. J. R. Powell and daughters,
Lurline and Carolyn, of Camilla, Miss
Lena Powell, of Orlando, Fla., and
Mr. Talmadge Powell, of Fort Myers,
Fla., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
E. M. Ellis, Sr. Wednesday.
May Regulate Growth at Bair
Nessler, whose book, “Tie Story
of Hair,” is used as a reference
and textbook, says: “In future gen
erations men will look back with
amusement upon the benighted
years when premature baldness was
a scourge. The time will come,
too, when mothers will be able to
regulate the development of their
children’s hair, even to develop
curly hair, just as they now develop
sturdy and robust children with
proper living and diet habits.”
WE GET THE DECISION
EVERY TIME!
The wise mover calls us when
Moving Time Comes, knowing that
our service will be satisfactory in
every detail.
George Johnston
Transfer Service
Telephone 1044
ALBANY, - GEORGIA