Newspaper Page Text
Unusual Insurance Policy.
' Freak Insurance Is not at all tat
common with (Joyd, but what Is con
sidered ns /one of tbe most curious
policies ever written by that agency
was one covering a bishop. U priests
, and IT.nuns who were bound from
London to Perth In western Australia.
The policy was for $10,000, divided
thus Bishop, $0,000; U priests, $3,000;
J 17 nans, $1,000. They all reached their
5 destination safely.
Don’t Rub It On
Bruises or Sore Muscles
S loan’s Liniment quickly pene
trates and soothes tuilhoal
robbing. Cleaner than mussy
plasters or ointments, does ji°i
stain the skin.
Have a bottle handy for emergency,
rheumatic achea and paint, neuralgia, lum
bago, gout, strain*, a^raint and lame back,
*%ield to SIoan*a Liniment.
At all druggist*, 25c. 50c, and $1.00.
Sloan’s
Liniment
H/LLS PAHY
professional Cards.
F. K. WILLIAMS, M D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Vienna, Ga.
Office over Walton Bros. Store
T. r.‘Bivins, m. n. • a. a. uoblsy, u. D
BIVINS & MOBLEY,
Physicians and Surgeons.
Calls Promptly Answered.
Vienna, * • • - Georgia.
L. L. WOODWARD,
Attorney-at-Law.
Vienna, ... Georgia.
V. 0. DAVES
Pbraiclan end Surgeon
Office in COOPER BUILDING
Cells promptly answered
CHAS. S. GURR
Insurance
Office in Vienna New,
Building
PHONE 181
DR. E. P. WHITEHEAD
DENTAL SURGEON
VIENNA, - GEORGIA
DR. T. E. BRADLEY
SPECIALIST
DU....I tf Eye, Ear, Note and
Throat
Westbrook Bldg., Cord.l., Ga.
DRS. ELLIOTT ft ELLIOTT
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS
CORDELE, GA.
MAKE OUR CATTLE FEED
SOLDIERS AND NOT TICKS
A W»r Slogan for the South (
Washington, D. C., May.—Faced
by the war demand for more meat,
let us take advantage of an opportu
nity which lies close to hand. Let us
recognize ‘that it is our definite duty
to turn our abundant grasses, our,
cheap And concentrated feeds, and
our mild climate to good account in
the production of beef and milk and
butter. And let ns realize that to. do
this, we must work together to rimove
tho great obstacle—the tick.
Not only will the elimination of
the tick make possible the! greater
and more profitable development of
our native cattle. It will make pos
sible also the bringing in of better
beef and milk producing stock which
new cannot live under the attacks
of ticks and the deadly germs of cat
tle fever which they transmit. Ex-i
termination of the tick, therefore,
will give us qui$*? diftet returns in
the form of increased growth of na
tive stock-, and it will at the same
time lay a foundation for the build
ing up of a much more profitable
cattle raising industry in a year or
two—while the war still may be in
progress.
The South’s battle against the tick
must not lag. It is not work which
may be dropped during the course of
war, the U. S. Department of Agri
culture points out. Rather it must
be pushed the more vigorously in or
der that territory may be rescued
from the unatisfactory and often un
profitable cattle raising which the
cattle tick imposes, and devoted'to
the more efficient and more profits
able .production of meat and milk
which may bo carried on in unquaran
tined territory. ~
The tick works for our enemies by
keeping down the supply of three of
our most important foods. Let us
recognize this pest, therefore, as an
enemy also. And let us wage against
him, frotn today on, without inter
ruption, a war of extermination.
*
DO WE FEED SOILS OR FEED
CROPS?
Some one may state that the South
spends millions of dollars annually,
feeding her soils. No, she spends
millions of dollars each year feeding
her crops. There is a difference, but
our failure in soil feeding is not that
we use no plant foods, for in some
sections tho expenditure for ferti
lizer is large. Our failure is that we
do not appreciate the full needs of
our soils and do not feed them eco
nomically or rationally. That we do
not appreciate the full annual remov
al of plant foods and do not replace
this removal in sufficient quantity, or
in the most economical manner. Does
the-feeding of the soil pay? All ex
perience proves that it does pay if
the feeding is done intelligently. If
sufficient feed is gvien a beef steer to
enable it to run its own body process
es and gain one-half pound a day,
there may be no profit, in fact, there
will almost certainly be none, but if
enough feed ia given to enable the
steer to gain two pounds a day there
may be a good profit. Likewise if
there be present in a soil only suffi
cient plant foods to produce 100
pounds of lint cotton, there will be
no profit, but i£ there be sufficient
plant food present, or they be sUp
plied, to produce 300 pounds of lint
there may or may not be a profit. If
he plant foods ape supplied by man
they must have been supplied at tho
lowest cost or the chance for profit
Excursion Fares
—via— ,
G. S. and F, R,y.
Account of tha following Special Occasions, G. S. & F. Railway
will sell reduced round trip fares from Coupon stations:
ATHENS, GA.—Account Summer School, University of Ga.
Dates of sale June 30, July 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 16, 17 and 30th. Return
limit fifteen days.
ATLANTA, GA.—Account National Baptist Sunday School and
B. Y. P. U., (Colored). Dates of sals June 4th and 6th. Limit June
14th, 1917.'
ATLANTA, GA.—Account International Association of Rotary-
Clubs. Dates of sale Juno 15,16 and 17. Limit June 25th. 1917.
KNOXVILLE, TENN.—Account Summer School of tbe South.
Dates af sale June 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 80, July 1, 7, and 14. Limit 15
days.
LOUISVILLE, KY.—Account American Library Association.
Dates of sale June 19, 20 and 21. Limit June 90th, 1917.
NASHVILLE, TENN. - Account Twelth Annual Seasion Sunday
School.Congress (Colored). Dates of sale June 11, 12 and 13th.
Limit June 21st, 1917.
NASHVILLE, TENN.-Peabody College Summer School.
Dates af sate June 11, 12.13, 14, 21, 22, July 20, 21, and 26th. Limit
15 days.
BLACK MOUNTAIN AND RIDGECREST. N. C.-Numerous
special occasions during May. June, July and August. Dates of sale
and limits upon application.
The nboye Excursion Farce are open to the Public. Excursion
fares also on sale to Mountain and Seashore resorts.
For complete information as to fares and schedules call on ahy
Ticket Agent, G. S. ft F. Ry., or address J. W. Jamison, T. P. A.,
-or C. B. Rhodes, G. P. A., Macon, Ga.
The Sign of
Perfect Service
Look at it—remem
ber it—for wherever
you see it displayed by
a tire dealer you will
v know
that there you can obtain tire
rvmp,' '
—that merely selling you a tire is
not the end,
, —tire service which will give you
one hund red a « d b n e courtesies, lit
tle and big, Which vviJ], keep down
your tire costs. i
Dealers displaying this sign are
the best dealers; ' .
—they carry a complete line of
United States Tires, <
—the ‘ Nobby ’, the ‘Chain’, the
‘Royal Cord’,the ‘Usco’, the ‘Plain’,
—a tire for every need of price
and use. , •
—Deal with these Sales and, Service Depots
—depend on their judgment—and you will
have supreme tire service.
United States Tires
Arc Good Tires
A Tire for Every Need of Price and Uie v,'
‘Nobby* •Chain* ‘Royal Cord’ ‘V/tco’ ‘Pfain?
United Statu TUBES and TIRB ACCESSORIES Ban* I
All the Sterling Worth and Wear that Make I
United State* litree Supreme j
Pi
ia small, la the first case, there ia
no possible chance for profit while in
the second caiw the chance for profit
is good, dependent on the manner in
which the piant foods are supplied.
If we couid once realize that the
business of the farmer is to take all
tbe plant food' from his soil which
he can take in the largest crops, but
that this is only\half his duty, and
that tho other half ia to.-fiut back
those plant foods removed by the
crops at the lowest possible cost, soil
feeding would soon receive due at
tention. But we wilt never realize
then ced of feeding our foils as much
as required until we batter appreci
ate the following facts: ‘
1. Soil only contains u limited
amount of plant food and in some
soils some of the plant foods ara, al
ready very low.
2. That plant foods—especially
phosphorous potassium and lime—art
not added to the soil by any cropping
system or any kind of livestock pro
duction.
3. That when crops are removal!
plant foods are removed.
, That humus is essential for sup
plying nitrogen and-for other impor
tant purposes, but our timm moist
climate causes humah-forming ma
terials to rot rapidly and our heavy
rainfall eauses soluble plant foods to
be removed by leaching end the wash
ing away of the soiL—The Progress
ive Farmer.
To Live Among Mem
We must bear each personality
we come In contact with Its lnheront
individuality, without at all counting)
on iu regeneration and without
damning It far remaining just what if
Is.-—Schopenhauer.
SAYS BIG EATERS I
GET KIDNEY TROUBLE
Take a Glass of Cold Watar and Kid-
neco to Flush Kidnlss if Back Hurta
Omit All Meat From Diat if You Feel
Rheumatism or Biaddar Bothers
The American men and women
must guard constantly against kidney
trouble, because we cat too much and
all our food is rich. Our blood is
filled with uric acid which the kid
neys strive to filter out, they weaken
from overwork, become sluggish; the
eliminative tissues clog and the re
sult ia kidney trouble, bladder weak
ness and a general decline in health.
When your kidneys feel like lumps
of lesd, your back hurts or the urine
is cloudy, full of sediment or you are
obliged to seek relief two or three
times daring the night; if you suffer
with sick keadsche or dizzy, nervous
spells, acid stomach, or have rheu
matism when the weather is bad get
from T. L. Roberts, Pleehurst, about
dozen kldneco tablets; take one
a glass of water before each meal
fo/ a few days snd your kidneys will
n act fine. This famous remedy
iijmade from perfectly harmless in-
ients snd sets quickly snd has
used for generations to flush
stimulate clogged kidneys; to
itrsiize the acids in the urine so
it/no longer is s source of irritation,
ius ending bladder disorders.
Kidncco is inexpensive; cannot in-
raako no mistake, insist on kid-
neco, it belongs in every home, be
cause nobody can make a mistake
by having good kidney flushing any j
time.
Adv. , |
(
You feel.
Gibraltar. For i
of its massive foil
Is there not
in a car built by
and reliability.
You know tl
very low price c*'
ample financial r- l
must be bought ii
tured with large f
You know tht
duction and vast £
a reputation of hig'
Company is a com!
ty—large products]
The stability oi ]
stantial car.
Model Four Ninety Tot
“Four Ninety” Touring Ct,
“Baby Grand" Touring Cl
ped, $800.00. Chevrolet
or five passenger Touring (>'
FORD
.Phone 65