Newspaper Page Text
%tdl Never Know How Good
This Coffee Is Until ^buTcyTt-
Haverlandt and Mammoth Yel
low Best Varieties for Use
In trying to eecure u iatreMed pro
duction of .food crops the soy beans
as a vegetable should not be overlook
ed. Ur. B. W. Hunt, ot Eatonton, call
ed the writer's attention to the soy
bean as a vegetable something over
a year ago. Ur. Hunt had been using'
the soy bean (or some time. It Is nu
tritious and makes good yields. J
The only objection to it Is the dlt-
Acuity ot preparing It (or table use.;
It Is hoped that this objection can be
overcome another year by the use ot
a bean that has been named the soys'
lima by W. J. Horse, ot the Depart
ment ot Agriculture. This Is a recent
Importation from’ the east and Is much
larger than other soy beans brought
into the country up to this time.
At the present time the - varieties
suggested are the Haverlandt and
Uammoth Yellow. The Haverlandt
on an average tttee year test has
W ORDS cannot adequately describe
the fine flavor of Luzianne Coffee.
You’ve got to taste it yourself. Won’t you
try Luzianne next time? ~
Luzianne la packed far sanitary, air
tight, full-measure tina—Impurities can’t
get fa and the flavor can’t leak out It
has been made very easy for you to get
acquainted. You take no chances. U
Luzianne doesn’t taste better than any
other coffee you ever tried, your grocer
will refund your money. So, buy that
first can today.
about 15 bushels per acre, and matures
In 154 days.
In planting the soy bean, only a
comparatively small area should be
planted at a time. A tow 30 teet long
will probably supply the average fam
ily with the green beans during the
period that they are In, best condition
(or use. The soy bean can be used
In the dry. state, but they are rather
difficult to cook.—Prof. John R. Fain,
State College ot Agriculture.
IOLET
Authorized Agents Ford Motor Co., Vienna, <la,
FIRE DAMAGES GRAZING
Fire always damages the range and
does not Improve grazing in the long
run. When the grass Is burned off
Just so much organlo matter Is remov
ed from the soil end It cannot be re
covered. ‘ Fire Is an Important agent
In clearing land but Its careless use
cost Georgia about $2,000,000 laat
You don’t hire a man for a responsible posi-
until 1TA11 OVA ^la/NMASIrvUlvv 'as, 4-a. Lie
tion until you are thoroughly satisfied as to his
character and ability.
You investigate his record of past perform
ances; his reputation for reliability.
Apply the same test to the car you buy.
- The price you pay for it is as much an invest
ment as the salary you pay the man. You expect
a good return from both. Investigate the Car as
you would the man. Reputation in both is the
determining factor. ^
You are urged to investigate the economy
records, the reputation and the performance of
the Chevrolet because to know all about the
Chevrolet is to be convinced tfiat its purchase re
flects favorably on the good judgement of its
thousands of owners. -
Ask us to tell you ALL about the Chevrolet.
RICE GAVE AST LARGE
RETURNS AS COTTON
ship of the Queen Elizabeth class
with 16-lnch guns. . American experts
still believe that the 14-lnch 00-eali-
bre rifle is harder-hitting and
more
accurate even than the larger British
weapon.
Reports from Italy say the results
achieved by the heavy American ord
nance already has elicited expressions
ot admiration from the Italian gun
ners.
In addition to heavy naval ord
nance, General Pershing has. received
a number of 12-lnch rifles designed
originally for installation in the oast
defense of the United States.
Hounted for high angle fire aa they
will be used In land operations, the
twelve rifles have an estimated range
of not leaa than 35,000 yards, or sub
stantially 17 miles. The 14-inch gun
has x a proportionately greater range.
Was Grown On Land Too Wet
For Other Crops
“Hy rice land paid me as large a
profit as my cotton land,"
RESULTS ACHIEVED BY ITAL
IANS BRING EXPRESSION OF
ADMIRATION FROM GUNNERS.
... said a farm
er, as he was having bis rice cleaned
at the mill at Tlfton, Georgia. This
Is the first year that an appreciable
amount of rice baa been grown In this
COUNTY AGENTSTHANK
STATE WEEKLY PRESS
immediate section, but "the production
was large enough to supply nine sur
rounding-counties,'' "*
-American-built
Washington, Feb.
ordnance of the.latest type and heav
iest calibre—ten-inch, 12-lnch arid
14-inch rifles are in service on the
sector of the Western front held by
the American army and on the Italian
front, It has been learned by the War
Department. The general belief has
been that very few American heavy
guns wero in Europe.
The guns'sent to Italy indudo a
number of 14-lnch rifles, both of the
forty-five and fifty calibre. The for
mer was considered the most powerful
naval weapon in existence until the
of the British battle.
. aays Mr. C. W.
Fulwood, owner of the mill.
The way the rice business got start
ed at Tlfton was this. Mr. Fulwood,
who, by the way is a lawyer, was mak
ing speeches over Tift county- last
spring, encouraging greeter food pro
duction, and in his speeches he prom
ised the people that be would put up
a rice mill if they would grow idee.
When the harvest season came there
was the rice and there waa the mill,
;though, as Mr. Fulwood says, *1 had
.to supervise the Installation of the
mill myself and then spend my spare
'nights In learning how to run It”
Diviflto a* fmni tffl 4a 11 AA an ar—
Hearty Co-operation Shown on
The Part of Newspapers .
At the annual meeting of the coun
ty agents and the borne demonstration
agents of the State College ot Agri
culture in Athens during tbe week be
ginning January 14, a resolution was
Introduced thanking the weekly press
of Georgia for tbe aid and co-operation
which the county agents had received
from tbe weeklies.
“Resolved:
The resolution follows:
That we, the County Agenta and the
Home Demonstration Agents ot the
Extension Division of the Georgia
State College of - Agriculture, 225
strong, do hereby unanimously ex
press our sincere thanks for the kind,
and cordial cooperation of tbe mem-'
bera of the Georgia Weekly Press As-:
•odatlon In tbe Improvement of the
home life and the agricultural Inter-;
ests within the atate." The resolu-.
tlon waa signed by William Bradford,
I. Luke Burdetf, Miss.Hoyle Skinner
and W. W. DriskeU.
Large naval guns now are being
built as future American battleships
arc to have 16-inch guns of both the
•forty-five and fifty calibre.
commi^-doning
FORD & CALHOUN
Pinehurst, Qa. _ ' •
' Profits ot from $30 to $100 an acre
were made by tho different farmers
and all this was money which they
considered that they had “Just picked
up." They planted generally from
three to five acres ot the wet, low
lands which are found en many farina
and which can be used for no other
crop. Some grew more than five acres
jzad this year there is one man who
expects to grow thirty acres in one
field.
The rice was drilled In three foot
rows and- thinned about a hoe's width,
leaving several plants in a hill. Mott
pt the farmers gave the crop. Just
enough cultivation to keep down the
For High-Grade Cent
etery Memorials
CONFER WITH.
Nature Proves
Jobson Theory
Lillie Green Spots Where
Stumps Have Been Dug
Teach Farmers A Valua
ble Lesson—Same Medi
cine Good For The Whole
Field.
would have,brought them much larger
pet returns.
RlOt may be used to take the place
ot wheat and heoce It has been urged ]
by Dr. Andrew M. Soule, Federal Food
Administrator (Or the state, that tbe
hundreds and thousands of acres ot
“crawfish” lands In south Georgia be
planted to rice this spring. The grow
ing ot rice win not take the - land
which has beep formerly devoted to
other crops, and thus It can be teen
that It la strictly a war measure and '
one that la very profitable.
The coat ol the rice mill at Tlfton ,
Waa $1,675, Including the building and
the cost ot Installation, in its first
year It has made a good profit on the
Investment, Is a paying proposition
and has brought to the farmers of Tift
PROPRIETOR
CLARK’S MONUMENTAL WORKS
AMERICUS. GEORGIA
The Firm of Established Reputation
The planter with the wide
Cover Wheel.
Notice it has no gears.
It will plant Cotton, Corn
Peanuts and Beans.
Place your order early, they
are hard to get.
Did you ever notice little patches
’ higher stalks ol!
t the field where
— These
-little healthy spots have never failed
^~ ’•* ^ ~
never wli£-because that’ground has
been loosened up to a depth and tha
roots have gone somewhere. Now
of deeper green and i
wheat or coni out' in
old stumps havo been dug?
.little healthy apeta have
to Ibow op In such cases, and they
never will—because thawMHIflMn
been loosened up to a
your Jobson and give the rest of the
field the same medicine. 'There will
be no more green spots because It
will all be green.
This Is Just one illustration of the
way John B. Jobson developed his
Common Sense System of farming,
In accordance with nature's laws, tor
bigger profits and constant Improve
ment of the land. Hla remarkable
plow, which Is now being pushed by
some of the leading pubUe men am
dealers In the country, is designe<
to make these methods cheep and
practicable for the small farmer as
wall as the targe planter. It’s going
to do a great deal for the food crops
right here In thin county. .
For full Information and some very
„ A full and complete line of
Caskets, Coffins and' Burial Robes
always ready for your inspection.
The experience of twenty, years in
this line enables ns to offer unex
celled service.
county money that would have other
wise been lost to them, for It tbe mill
bad not come the wet lands would
still be n liability and not an asset—
Editor, State College of Agriculture.
Plans of the American Library As
sociation include the establishment
of book And library service in Army
and Navy hospitals b America and
France.
“Stars and Stripes” Is the name of
the weekly newspaper being publish
ed in France tor American troops, un
der thed irection of theinteUigence
section. Practically the entire paper
Is devoted to American newt. Includ
ing a daily radio report of abont 1400
words supplied by the Committee on
Public Information to the French
Government . -
J. P. Heard & Sons Company
Funeral Directors
Marble Vaaha Famished Upea Proper NetUe
Cordele, Ga.
“Bio Machinery People 1