North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924, July 28, 1921, Image 7

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• : • ?• ’ THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1921. NOTHIN DOIN' t6H ! por l 3TJLC { . think we coulo HAue see* Serred , IF YA CAME luiTH M& lHf\0Tu)O BOX J "W scars. y—^ IH 6o'In’to 566 i THiS" etc GAMe , An’ YoukecoMiK' k)lTH M£ . ItfNOU) A PtACe ujh€RS/ ! NOUJ,Af?£NT ^> YA GCAO YACAm6 \ with Me? ya saw the wHoce vast 6AUCAM6 FOR nothin' -*YA COOLONT WANT ANYTHIN^ 36TT6R THAN I THI5--NoyoJ T,Could ya f TIRES ft.'i/xsat 1 wanYto com£ ( —> SOMfc PCAC6 WITH , M£,TlMMie? \ ; Clancy Horace I Wasn’t Convinced Bv PERCY L. CROSBY L opV * hLbT lhe McClur ® N *"5P»P«f Sjnd.calc Wrinkle Bros. Foundry & Machine Works General Repair Work, Castings Depot Street :: Dalton, Ga. Cords Fabrics R eduction in Fisk k- prices does not mean a lowered quality. Every Fisk Tire, large or small, is a standard Fisk Tire. Present low prices are on tires which have made the name Fisk famous for quality and mileage. There is no better tire value in the world than a Fisk Tire at the present price. Sold only by Dealers esfion Many persons, otherwise vigorous and healthy, are B bothered occasionally with Q indigestion. The effects of a gw disordered stomach on the £2 system are dangerous, and “J* prompt treatment of indlges- H tion is important. “The only Q medicine I have needed has n been something to aid diges- ™ tion and clean the liver,” Q writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a g McKinney, Texas, farmer. “ “My medicine is TheM’s S BUCK-DRAUGHT B for indigestion and stomach Q trouble of any hind. I have never found anything that E3 touches the spot, like Black- H Draught. I take it in broken £2 doses after meals. For a long B time I tried pills, which grip- H ed and didn’t give the good « results. Black-Draught liver H medicine is easy to take, easy Q to keep, inexpensive.” Get a package from your 22 druggist today—Ask for and B insist upon Thedford’s—the B only genuine. Qj Legal Notices LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. ‘Jeorgia. Whitfield County. Henrietta Wood Thomas has ap plied for Letters of Administration with will annexed on the estate of Frances J. Thomas, deceased, and I will pass upon said application on the first Monday in August, 1921. H. J. WOOD, Ordinary. PETITION FOR CHARTER. s tate of Georgia, Whitfield County. To the Superior Court of said County: The petition of J. C. Henderson, of said state and county; R. E. Ferrell, T. S. Ferrell, Fred A. Noll and E. Tal lent. of the county of Hamilton, state Tennessee, respectfully shows to the Court: (IV That they desire for themselves, their associates and successors, to be incorporated and mode a body politic, nnder the name and style of COCA-COLA BOTTLING WORKS OF DALTON, GEORGIA, fi°r the period of twenty (20) years, tv'tii Fne right of renewal at the expi- ration of that time, as provided by law. „ (2) Tho principal office -of said company shall h e at Dalton, Whitfield County. Georgia. (3) The object of said, corporation is pecuniary gain and profit to itself and 1! ' stockholders. (4) The business to he carried on by Corporation is the manufacturing, pring. selling, bottling, handling, dis- 'huting and otherwise dealing in ° e p-Cola and other beverages com- 3Kir!: T known as soft drinks. Tn . (5) capital stock of said Corpora- , 10:1 s ' n all he Fourteen Thousand Dol- ^ i>14.000.00), which has been fully ^T^eribed. All of the capital stock 0 g divided into shares of One Hun- efl D <>Hars ($100.00) each. (6) Petitioners desire to have the right to have the subscriptions to said cap ital stock either paid in money, oi property to be taken at a fair valua tion. (6) Petitioners desire the right to sue and be sued, to plead and be implead- de, to have and use a common seal, to make all necessary by-laws and regu lations, and to do all other things that may be necessary for the successful carrying on of said business, includ ing the right to buy, hold and sell Teal estate and personal property suitable to the purposes of the Corporation. Wherefore, petitioners pray to he in corporated under the name and style aforesaid, with the privileges and im munities herein set forth, an& as are now or may hereafter be allowed a Corporation, of similar character nn der the laws of Georgia. Fred A. NOLL, W. M. SAPP, Attorneys for Petitioner. Georgia, Whitfield County. Office of Clerk of Superior Court of Whitfield County. I, C. L. Isbill, Clerk of the Superior Court of Whitfield County, hereby cer tify that the foregoing is a true and correct copy of the application for charter, as the same appears of file in 'this office. This 14th day of July, 1921. C. L. ISBILL, Clerk of Superior Court. Filed in office, this 14th day of July, 1921. C. L. ISBILL. Get it today. EM IBBBBBSBBBBBB LEAVE TO SELL. GEORGIA, Whitfield County. Cal Workman and Ola Calhoun, ex ecutors of the will of M. Q. Workman, deceased, have applied for leave to sell the lands belonging to said estate and I will pass upon said appjcation on the first Monday in August, 1921. H. J. WOOD, Ordinary. NOTICE. We regret to say that there is a number of cases of Para-Ty phoid fever in Dalton. Vacci nation is as much a specific against typhoid and para-ty- phoid as vaccination is against small pox. We advise that our people be inoculated at once against these two fevers. J. H. STEED, City Physician W. E. WOOD, Mayor. ♦ ♦ ♦ FARM BUREAU NEWS. ♦ ♦ ♦ YEAR’S SUPPORT. GEORGIA, Whitfield County. The appraisers appointed to set apart a year’s support for the widow of S. J. Clark, deceased, have filed their re port with me and I will pass upon said report on the first Monday in August, 1921.. H. J. WOOD, Ordinary. LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. GEORGIA, Whitfield County. B. N. McHan has applied for Let ters of Administration on the estate of L. T. McHan, deceased, and I will pass upon said application on the first Monday in August, 1921. H. J. WOOD, Ordinary. Five Springs. The regular meeting of the Five Springs Community Council was held Tuesday night, July 19. with a fine at tendance. The ladies’ club met in the afternoon and they remained for the night meeting and served a sumptuous picnic supper just at twilight, which was enjoyed by everyone. The main subject for discussion was better schools for the community and a better community in which to live. County Agent Chas. O. Smith was the first speaker on the program. He presented the matter in such a' force ful way that the whole audience sanc tioned what he said by a rising vote. He showed how a community could build a high school and maintain it cheaper than they could send their children off. He showed also how one dozen children would get a high school education where now one was being sent off to boarding school, and how much better it would be for the boys and girls, the future hope of the coun try, to be able to complete a high school education and stay around father’s hearthstone. Mrs. Moore sanctioned what had been said and gave some concrete illus trations of how communities had been built up by better schools and co operation in every good work. Mr. Buell Stark made a very earnest plea for better schools. County Agent Chas. O. Smith made a short talk about the fight on the boll weevil. The audience resolved itself into a committee as a whole to thoroughly ad vertise the next meeting, which will be August 16. The school question will again be taken up and a good program arrang ed. Everybody is invited to attend and take partin the discussion; also there will be another picnic, supper. ML Pleasant The farmers’ meeting that was to have been held Tuesday night, Ang. 9, has been postponed until Friday night. Aug. 19, ou account of the protracted fleeting at that place. County Agent (’has. O. Smith has promised to dis cuss better schools and other topics of interest to the community. Everybody interested in better schools and a better community in which to live is cordially invited. Center Point. A mass meeting of the people of Cen ter Point community is called for Sat urday night. July 30.: for the purpose of talking over the boll weevil situa tion and the discussion of a high school for the Dug Gap, Center Point, Antioch and Five Springs school districts. Everybody interested is cordially in vited to attend. Pine Grove. The regular monthly meeting of the Pine Grove Community Council will be held Monday night, Aug. 1. The county agent will discuss the boll weevil situation and other matters of interest to the community. Everybody in reach of the church is earnestly requested to he present. Chas. O. Smith, County Agent. L O. O. F. Dalton Lodge No. 72, L O. O. F., will meet in regular session Friday evening, July 29, at S o’clock. The First degree will he conferred. All members are urged to attend. Visiting brothers cordially welcomed. M. F. Caldwell, N. G. G. W. Keister, Sec. Jr. O. U. A. M. Dalton Council No. 30, Jr. O. U. A. M., will meet in regular session Thursday ( evening, July 28, at S o’clock, import ant business will be transacted. All members are urgently requested to be present — Oba Gravitt, Councilor. R. H. Sapp, Rec. Sec. BUILDING PRODUCTION, PROFIT AND PROSPERITY INTO AN ORCHARD. There are two general classes of eekers for advice, the one who pos sess orchards which they se'ek to develop to the highest point, and those who contemplate planting an orchard. The latter class will find that a little time and money invested in considering locations will be well spent. The primary requisites for successful orcharding are soil, cli mate, labor, markets, and facilities for reaching them. As to climate, perhaps the most that we can do is to select one as free as possible from extremes of heat and cold, or from sudden changes, and with neither an excess of moisture, nor a deficiency. Prox imity to large bodies of water will assist in this matter. We have a little more choice in the matter of soils, but there are so many dif ferent soils upon which various kinds of fruits succeed that I be lieve there are more fruit soils than ruit men. A soil which is well f plied with fertility, in well balanced proportions and with plenty of hu mus and moisture, and at the same time free from surplus moisture is preferable. Many or all of these needs can be supplied later if lacking but it is desirable to secure soil with as many of them already in it, as pos sible, as I believe it is cheaper to buy fertility by the acre than by the sack or ton. Nearness to markets or shipping points is another important point, which will forever impress itself upon the orchardist as he markets his crops from year to year. In the management of the orchard and especially in harvesting the crop, considerable extra help will be required, and this should be con sidered in choosing a location. Many, however, like myself have gradually developed into orchard- ists on the spot of our birth and have thought best to make the best of conditions already existing there. After the location has been selected the ground should be put in condi tion for the orchard. This means that if it is tillable land, it should be fitted as for a pre mium crop of grain or vegetables. I am aware that many fine and prof itable orchards are grown on land which is so untillable that it can not be well fitted, but this means extra labor and expense which may in the end, sometimes more than offset the extra cost of higher priced land. We have in the past heard more or less about pedigree trees, and while their advocates have not, proved their superiority very con clusively, still it is perhaps wise for the orchardist to avail’himself of any possible benefits which may arise from propagating from trees of known excellence where possible. Records of bearing orchards for a series of years show quite a vari ation in yield of the different trees. The trees should be well grown and vigorous, but not grown so rapidly as to be soft and sappy. They should be so handled between nursery and orchard as to preserve all of the moisture and vitality in root and top and not allow any check in growth. Whether to use the filler system in planting will de pend upon circumstances. If the ground is to be devoted mainly to the orchard, and I believe it should be, then I believe in using fillers, but would plant apple trees as fill ers in an apple orchard. If the va rieties being planted are of a mod erate h^bit of growth and bear at an early age, I would use the same kind for fillers as for permanent trees,’ but if the permanent trees, grow large before bearing much, then I would use for fillers some va riety which grow more slowly and began bearing younger. I have even used double fillers with good results, using four times as many trees as should remain per manently. In this case, even more than in single fillers, it is absolutely necessary to feed the soil well and remove the surplus trees as soon as they begin to crowd the permanent ones. Pruning, I have always called a necessary evil. Necessary, be cause, I never could secure just the kind of a tree that I desired,-with out any pruning; evil, because every branch which is removed from the trees removes just as much of the tree’s labors and defers growth and fruitition just as much. In the case of the young tree I think “guiding” and “directing” would describe the operation about as well as pruning. Pruning, spraying and fertilization,' might well be called .the Trinity of the fruit growers theology. The highest measure of success cannot bp obtained unless all three of them are given careful attention. We must create in partnership with nature, a strong, healthy,, well pro portioned tree, well supplied with healthy foliage and vigorous fruit buds, and so shaped as to admit the greatest amount of sunshine to foli age and fruit. To secure this growth and the proper development of prof itable crops of fruit, year after year, we must feed the tree well just as we must feed the work horse liberal ly if we expect continued labor, or the dairy cow, if we expect great records of milk and cream. ^This can be done equally well by the use of commercial fertilizers, by stable ma nure, or cover crops, or better yet, by a wise combination of all of them. The absolute necessity of spray ing is now so well recognized that I will only urge more thoroughness and more careful study of require ments and methods. We use high pressure guns, plenty of equipment and spray the trees from both sides with the wind when it blows from that side. Most large orchards have too few spraying outfits. Dusting will probably prove a valuable aux iliary to spraying in some instances. Another operation which is not gen erally practiced, that of thinning, I consider very profitable. We feel that the time required to thin the fruit is saved in picking and grading, besides the thinned trees produce fruit of better size and quality and the trees are not in jured so much as when overloaded. This brings us to the problem of marketing, which is one of the most important and possibly the most im portant part of orcharding. After we have spent years of prep aration, toil, expense and waiting, we have a right to expect profitable returns, and as a rule we are not dis appointed. Growing a variety of fruits ripening in succession will not only distribute the risk and la bor over a longer period, and en able the employment of a moderate number of trained helpers for the whole season, rather than a large number of “pickups” fpr a short time, but will allow the orchardist to secure and hold a better market than if he is only on the market for a short time. The rules for successful market ing, may be expressed in a very few rules. 1st. Grow something which the public wants. 2nd./ Handle it so as to preserve all of its attractiveness and flavor at the lowest possible expense. 3rd. Give every one a square deal. In other words, unless a transaction proves satisfactory to both parties, it will not tend to build up a lasting business. Unless the orchardist is located near to a home market so he can sell directly to consumer, or nearly so, he will need to either grow in large quantities or cooperate with other growers, so that the combined output' will be large enough to be landled economically. The wonderfully efficient work done by the Western Fruit growers through their organizations is an ex ample of what may be accomplished. There is one requisite for success ful orcharding which I have not mentioned but which adds much to the pleasure and profit of the work. .1 do not believe it is possible to attain the highest measure of suc cess without a love and enthusiasm for our profession, and certainly no one ever chose a profession, of which we had greater reason to be proud.. We are co-partners with Na ture and Nature’s God in the pro duction of the greatest “luxurious necessity” known to mankind. There is nothing equal to an abun dant supply of fresh wholesome fruit to produce sound healthy bodies and clear active brains, for the nation, and he who does this and realizes that he is also affording his family the ideal environment for an all round development of mind and body, can well feel proud of his symmetrical avocation. ARE YOU PALE? WEAK? Enrich Your Blood Why be sallow, thin or weak when thousands have improved their condition by taking S. S. S. Build up your blood. S. S. S. is the recognized general tonic and system builder. It is also used successfully in the treat ment of rheumatism and skin diseases arising from impover ished blood. - For Special Booklet or for indi- vidualadvice, without charge, write Chief Medical Advisor, S.S.S.Co., Dep’t 437, Atlanta, Ga. Get S. S. S. at your druggist. S.S.S. Fo r Rich, Red Blood Save Pennies— Waste Dollars Some users of printing save pennies by get' ting inferior work and lose dollars through lack of ad vertising value in the work they get. Printers as a rule charge very reasonable prices, for none of them get rich although nearly, all of them work hard. Moral: Give your printing to a good printer and save money. Our Printing Is Unexcelled When you think of the APEX consider not only how it saves your time and strength in cleaning carpets, but remem ber its hundred other uses. The APEX would be worth its weight in sterling silver if used only for cleaning furs and clothing, for removing dust from picture mouldings and frames and fire places, from door and window casements, from steam and furnace radiators, from* closet floors and shelves, from behind the bath tub, from draperies, curtains and portiers, from inside the piano and for cleaning and aerating pillows and mattresses—doing any cleaning task in a fraction of the time and with none of the physical effort required by brooms, brushes, feather dusters and dusting cloths and by destructive beating and shaking. ELECTRIC SUCTION CLEANER Your Last Chance! FreeTrial-Easy Pay ments We regret to announce that our remarkable successful five days’ Free Home Trial Offer positively expires Saturday night If you have delayed until now do not wait longer. Our special easy payment terms will be continued indefinitely but our offer of a five day’s free loan of a brand new guaranteed APEX Electric Suction Cleaner will be withdrawn after Saturday night SUCTION CLEANER Take warning! You have only a few days more in which to act Take no chances. Telephone, write or call at our store, PfcoMe 117 MURPHY ELECTRIC CO., Dalton Ga