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I Have Just Received Two Cars of
The Southern Fence Wire
I Have it in The Following Sizes:
LADY STEVEDORES ON JOB
Three of Them Are Fired for Cutting
—Other* Are Giving Vtlu-
able Service.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—Sixteen women In
overall! are wrestling dally with 132-
pound bags of coffee and hundred
weights of sugar, working side by sldo
with muscular men long used to this
hard job. They are the new lady steve
dores hired by the New York Dock
company.
There would be 10 of these female
dock wallopers were It not for the
fact that, three of the number en
gaged were Bred on account of tbelr
cussing.
Among the present 16 are an au
thor, n former vaudeville ttar, several
widows, and two negro women. Tbelr
hours are 7 a. m. to 5 p. m. five days
a week. They are getting 32M cents
an hour, the rate paid to men.
H. B. Whipple, general manager,
predicts a bright future for all women
similarly engaged, though bo really
had no notion the scheme would work
as well as It has. .
Sett Example to Teachers.
White Cloud, Kan.—Professor Rob
erts, superintendent of the schools
here, baa set. the example In patriot
ism for Ida men teachers. Instead of
attending « county teachers' Institute
he has gone to work raising garden
truck on a farm.
48-IN. HIGH, 6-IN. STAY—14 STRANDS FOR GENERAL USES
36-IN. HIGH 6-IN. STAY—12 STRANDS FOR HOG AND CATTLE USE
60-IN. HIGH, 6-IN. STAY—21 STRANDS EXTRA HEAVY FOR
CHICKENS
The customer will find this wire more heavily galvanized than any
class of wire on the market that sella on the same basis. The Southern
Fence is a Southern product and is honest goods. It is the best fence
that I have ever sold in my 25 years of business and I have sold all kinds.
It is a class of fence wire that will give entire satisfaction and the life
and durability of this wire is its own salesman and that is the best sales
man on earth. ..See my wire and it will sell itself.
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 us to offer
celled service.
J. P. Heard & Sons
Funeral’Directors
Marble Vaslb Fuakhod t/pa«*n»ar Noties
FARM LOANS
. Get All You Borrow
. The commission may be distributed over the period of $
the loan, payable on interest payment dates, if desired.
We deal direct with the applicant, thus saving 1 timei
and greatly reducing the usual commission charge.
If you wantQUICK ACTION and LOWEST COST,
* write us stating amount you wish to borrow and these-’
curity you have to offer.
ATLANTA TRUST COMPANY
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
For High-Grade Cenr
etery Memorials
CONFER WITH
C. J. Clark:
PROPRIETOR
CLARK’S MONUMENTAL WORKS
rAMERICUS. GEORGIA
The Firm of Established Reputation
A
&
GEORGIA
SOUTHERN & FLORIDA RAILWAY
1
Schedules to Macon, Cordele, Tifton, Valdosta, Jacksonville
and Palatka.
• >
Effective June 8, 1918.
No. 6 No. 2
No. 32
.....12:31 a m
Arrive Atlanta
......7:45 a m
No; 1 No. 6
No. 33
Arrive Cordele
1:40 p m....6:30 p m
4:42 a m
Arrive Tifton
Arrive Sparks
4:09 p m..: ,
7:01 a m
Arrive Valdosta
5 :10 p m.
7:65 a m
Arrive Jacksonville ...
9:00 p m ..
...10:65 a m
No. 11
No. 13.
Arrive White Springs
^Arrive Lake City
Arrive Palatka'
11:30 am
REFUSE OF SORGHUM
IS GOOD CATTLE FEED
So a Feeding Test Held At Tab
mo, Georgia, Shows.
That sorghum refuse, called bagasu,
Is a very cheap feed when combined
With cotton seed meal and velvet beans
has been shown by a feeding test car
ried on by the State College of Agri
culture at Talmo last winter. The
bagasse was e by-prdduct of the man
ufacture of sorghum syrup and gave
excellent results as a feed.
It was fed as a roughage for one
hundred and ten days and in deter
mining the Anal results it was charged
at $S a ton., The velvet beaUB were
oharged.et 124 a ton and the cotton
seed meal at 145 a ton. When all the
expenses had been paid there was a
profit of IS.5S a head and In addition
there were three hundred loads of
good stable manure worth approxi
mately three dollars a load.
The bagasse contained from'1.2 to
L4 times es much digestible material
ts com sorghum, and the fifty native
bred Shorthorn and Hereford steers
to which It was fed made an average
daily gain of 1.61 pounds per bead for
the entire-period. It proved to be an
excellent carbonaceous feed.
It bas been well recognized for a
number of years that cottonseed meal
|s a good concentrate for finlohlng off
beef cattle but there boa always been
a shortage of carbonaceous feeds for
roughage. In this feeding experiment
material that had formerly been al
lowed to go to waste was conserved
and proved itself to be a very cheap
source for roughage for feeding with
puch concentrates as cottonseed meal
and velvet beans. Now since, Geor
gia Is so well'adapted to the growing
pt sorghum, and since there is a world
Shortage of sugar, thousands of .gal
lons of this syrup should be produced
and the refuse fed to dairy and beet
cattle, and not be allowed to go to
waste.—Editor State College of Agri
culture.
CAPTURES COUSIN IN RAID
» NOTE—f indicates flag stop.
: * i ■ Hhitwiiftjisus ffraitj
Trains arrive Vienna from north 1:19 p m, 6:11 p m, 14:28 a in.
Trains arrive Vienna from South 12:31 a m, 9:10 a m, 2:28 p m. -
| Schedule shown as inlormation bnt not guaranteed.
C. B. RHODES,
G. P. A., Macon, Ga.
C. T. KILGORE,
Tkt. Agt., Vienna, Ga.
American Soldier Grabs Relative In
Attack on the Hun
Trenches, ,
Hackensack, N- J.—Details ol how
two cousins, one a corporal In the
American army and the other a soldier
ot the kaiser, met in France after a
raid wpre told here recently.
The American Is Corporal William
Munz, Jr., ot HaOkensack, a member
of the One Hundred and Sixty-fifth In-
fnntry, the old “Fighting Sixty-ninth."
■ The German boy Is Gustave Winkel-
monn of .Bremen, a prisoner In an
American camp. Letters from Cor
poral Mnnz say he was in a raid
against the German trenches recently
and came back with a butch of pris
oners. The captives were being
Identified when Winkelmann mentioned
that he had relatives In the United
States. Munz asked their names and
found that the boy was his cousin.
RIES GUV ARMSTRONG
When in Macon Take Time to See . <
Ries ©Armstrong'
Watches, Clocks, Diamonds, Jewelry and Silverware
RELIABLE GOODS ONLY
316 THIRD STREET
rtNE ENGRAVING AND REPAIRING
MACON, GEORGIA
James W. Dorough at al vs. Mrs. A. C.
Doroufh at al. _
Dooly Superior Court, Nov. Term,
1918. Equitable Petition.
It appearing to the court that the
heirs at laV of J. G. Dorough, deceas
ed, have each and all been made par
ties to the above stated case, either
by voluntary action or by service of
copy of the petition and order, and it
further appearing that said heirs at
law were not parties to the cause pre
viously filed and pending in this
court being docket number 962 ' and
sounding Mrs. A. C. Dorough vs. J.
T. Westbrook et al, it is therefore or
dered that the last named case be
consodidated with the above stated
case and that the same be tried to
gether as one issue and proceeding,
all the parties being before the court
for final judgment and decree.
It is further ordered by the court,
all parties and their counsel consent
ing thereto, that Mrs. A. C. Dorough
as Receiver hereinbefore named, shall
offer fbr sale and sell to the highest
bidder for cash, at public sale before
the court house door in Vienna, Ga.,
between the! egal hours of sale on the
bOiween the legal hours of sale on the
advertising the same in a public ga
zette of the county where said ‘ land
lies, once a week for four weeks, the
following described property, to-wit:
One Hundred and Fifty Acres, more
or less, being the western portion of
lot number 32 in tho Sixth land dis
trict of Dooly county, and comprising
all of said lot of land except that por-
tion’on the eastern side of raid lot
now owned and held by Joe E Brown;
also fifty-five acres, more or less be
ing in the northwest corner of lot of
land number 32 in the eleventh land
district of Crisp county, Georgia, be
ing rectangular in shape and of which
J. G. Dorough died, seized and pos
sessed, ail of said lands being part
and parcel of the lands belonging to
the estate of said J. G. Dorough, and
sold for the purpose of paying the .in
debtedness of the estate, and ffr the
purpose of distribution under the
terms of said will.
It is further ordered by the court
that said named tracts of lend be of
fered first separately and then to
gether, and that the purchaser at
speh sale deposit 10 per cent of the
amount of his bid and that the bids
and deposit be immediately reported
to the court for confirmation or re
jection. *
It is further ordered that when said
property is sold, that the proceeds
arising from said said shall bo direct
ed, first to the payment of the costs
arising In this proceeding, and in ad
ministering the same and next to the
paytoent»ftf Jthc debts of said estate
set forth , .,-in this proceeding, in
amounts and according to priorities
as determined by the court, and that
the residue be distributed among the
heirs at law of the said J. G. Dorough,
share and share alike.
Done in open court this 16th day
of August, 1918.
D. A. R. CRUM.
Judge Superior Court, Dooly County,
Georgia.
We consent’to the above: Mrs. A.
C. Dorough, Receiver, D. L. Hender
son. and 0. T. Gower, Attys. for Mrs.
A. C. Dorough; Waiter M. Eakcs Atty
for J. 0. Dorough and all heirs of J.
G. Dorough by his first wife.
Pursuant to thenbove and forego
ing order of the court, the property
therein described will be offered for
sale, and sold to the highest bidder
for cash before the court house door
in Vienna between tho legal hours for
sale on the first Tuesday in October,
1918.
Mrs. A. C. VO ROUGH,
. -‘ Receiver.
“TV/TY little girl is subject to sudden
attacks of stomach and bowel
trouble and Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin al
ways relieves her quickly so she is soon play- -
ing about as usual. I have used Syrup Pepsin
for three years -and would not be without it
now at any price.”
( !
'From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by\
Mn. Jar. F. Smith, 600 Virginia Are., 1
Pittiburg, Pa. /
Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin
The Perfect Laxative
Sold by Druggists Everywhere
50 cts. (Ip $1.00
Constipation is a condition to be guarded against from
infancy to old age; Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is as
safe and pleasant for children as it is effective on even
the strongest constitution. A trial bottle can be obtain
ed free of charge by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell.
458 Washington St., Monticello, 111.
PINE.
We have a fine lot of
and 2 Pine Shingles for i
diate delivery.
Now is the lime to purchase
these as the prices are gradu
ally increasingand will be very
much higher by early fall.
See us for
Farmers Hardware
: Georgia
INDISTINCT PRINT