Newspaper Page Text
An Eminent
Atlanta Specialist
Dr. T. W. Hughes, Who is Permanently Located in
Atlanta and Has Been For Years, Will be in Jack
son for One Day Only, Tuesday, May 23rd, at
Hotel Buchanan.
This eminent physician has received
many letters from numerous sufferers
of this city and vicinity requesting
him to treat them from his Atlanta of
fice without first seeing them in per
son. This he always declines to do,
but as he has several patients here,
Dr. Hughes has decided to come in per
son or else have his chief consulting
physician here on the above named
day, and has consented to see those
who desire to consult him regarding
their condition. He is coming to this
city well equipped to make any and
all necessary examinations. His office
at the hotel will be especially fitted
for his convenience and comfort.
Dr. T. W. Hughes, who has a repu
tation as a successful specialist on
nervous, chronic and special diseases,
will be in this city on the above named
date. He cordially invites sufferers of
any chronic ailment to consult him
while here. No charge for examina
tion or consultation.
Dr. Hughes numbers among his
cured patients some of the city’s and
county’s most prosperous and influen
tial citizens who will gladly recom
mend him as a thorough, reliable and
capable specialist.
Dr. Hughes has been located in At
lanta for years, where he enjoys a
large and lucrative practice. He nev
er allows any misleading statements
to appear in- his announcements. He
does not institute any “SO-CALLED”
mail treatment, but insists upon see
ing each and every patient in person.
He never attempts to treat, diagnose
or prescribe for any one without first
having the privilege of making a thor
ough personal examination.
The afflicted should take advantage
of this exceptional opportunity of see
ing this eminent physician and special
ist. Do not delay, but call to see him
on one of the above mentioned dates,
and have a friendly talk with him re
garding your condition or ailment. His
advice is absolutely free and confi
dential. By calling you do not obli
gate yourself in any way. Dr. Hughes
does not endeavor to compete with
your family physician. He specializes
on nervous, chronic and deep-seated
diseases, as he is experienced in this
class of work.
If you are a sufferer, consult Dr.
Hughes and get his expert opinion
and advice. If he finds your case a
curable one, he will accept it on a
Dr. Hughes can be seen at Hotel Buchanan between the Hours
of Ba.m.to 12 m., and from 1p.m.t06 p. m. Dr. Hughes is in
no way connected with the “Doctor Hughes” traveling through
Georgia, representing himself to be the original Atlanta Specialist,
and not giving his initials. Any announcement of Dr. Hughes
will be signed.
Remember the Date, Tuesday, May 23rd
Dr. T. W. Hughes, Specialist
WA N. Broad Street Atlanta, Ga.
F. F. HUGHES BELL PHONE MAIN 3350 J. A. KIMBKLL
THE TERMINAL GARAGE
HEAR TERMINAL HOTEL
CARS REPAIRED. STORED AND CLEANED
Night and Day Service. Will Answer Phone Calls. Open All Hours
RADIATOR REPAIRING AUTOGENIOUS WELDING
Has A Good Reputation
The original and genuine Honey and
Tar cough syrup is Foley's Honey and
Tar Compound and because this has
given such universal satisfaction and
cured so many cases of conghs, colds,
croup and whooping cough there are
imitations and substitutes offered to
the public. Insist upon Foley’s The
Owl Pharmacy.
reasonable basis, and will continue
your treatment from his Atlanta in
stitution. So if you have an acquaint
ance, relative or friend whom you
think he could benefit or cure, notify
them of the date he will be here and
advise that they consult him.
The doctor’s best references are his
many cured, grateful and satisfied pa
tients all over the South, who will
gladly testify to his skill and ability
in treating chronic and deep-seated
diseases.
While Dr. Hughes is a Surgeon as
well as a Physician and Specialist,
he does not believe in promiscuous
operations. He only believes in the
use of the knife as a last resort and
has a score of cured patients who,
previous to consulting him, had been
told by numerous doctors that their
cases were incurable without an oper
ation. His advice to incurables is that
they do not squander money on un
scrupulous and unskilled doctors.
Among the diseases successfully
treated by Dr. Hughes are Rheuma
tism, Catarrh, Asthma, Uric Acid, Dis
eases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Heart
Stomach and Intestines, Blood an 6
Skin Diseases, Nervous Debility, Ner
vous Decline, Varicose Veins, Epilep
sy, Diseases of Women; Special dis
eases peculiar to both sexes; Piles
cured without cutting or pain; Fis
tula, Rupture, Eczema, Diseases of
the Ear. Nose and Throat. In fact,
any nervous, chronic or deep-seated
disease. The doctor will likely visit
this city once or twice a month.
No matter who has told you that you
cannot be cured, consult Dr. Hughes,
or his associate, and obtain his learned
opinion and honest advice. Even
though you do not take treatment, the
consultation will cost you nothing. The
doctor extends a cordial invitation to
all. Even though you do not need
treatment he will be glad to meet you
while here.
Dr. Hughes successfully administers
606 and 914 without cutting or pain.
His offices, located at 16 Vz North
Broad street, Atlanta, Ga., opposite
the Third National Bank Building, are
the most spacious and modernly equip
ped in the Southern States, and con
tain every facility for the proper diag
nosis and treatment for the particular
diseases upon which he specializes.
Read the following testimonials,
which are taken from many on file in
my Atlanta offices, and if you are pre
vented from seeing Dr. Hughes on his
visit to your city, call on him at his
Atlanta offices the first opportunity:
Testimonials.
T. L. Davidson, 301 Crew street, At
lanta, Ga., says: “About five years
ago Dr. Hughes cured me of a chronic
case of Kidney and Bladder Trouble
after many doctors had failed.”
R. W. Statham, 1114 Candler Build
ing, Atlanta, Ga., says: “Dr. Hughes
cured me of a case of Eczema that
had resisted the best efforts of other
doctors.”
T. F. Beall, Lafayette, Ala., says:
“Dr. Hughes cured me of a chronic
case of Constipation and Piles without
cutting, pain or inconvenience, and I
consider the money I paid to Dr.
Highes the best investment I ever
made in my life.”
These are a few of the many testi
monials taken from sworn copies
which are on file in Dr. Hughes’ At
lanta offices.
POTATO PLANTS
A few thousand sweet potato
slips for sale at $1.50 per thou
sand, now ready for delivery.
Uld bunch Yams the best. M. E.
Washington, Jackson, Ga. Rt. 5.
5-12-4 tp
JACKjON 10 FLAY
MONTICELLO FRIDAY
The last baseball same of the
school year on the home grounds
will be staged Friday, when the
locals meet Monticello. "1 his is
sure to be an interesting game
as Monticello and Jackson are old
rivals on the diamond.,
Monday Jackson willjouiney
over to Grifhn for a game with
the high school team of that city.
The Jackson high school team,
under the coaching of Prof. W.
0. Perritt, is now playing a good
article of ball and the boys should
have the active support of every
fan in the city.
With Moore pitching and Bry
any doing the receiving, Jackson
trounced Forsyth Wednesday af
ternoon 10 to 6.
Go out to the game Fridav *nd
root for the home team and show
the boys you are with them.
Agricultural Moving
Pictures In Georgia
J. Phil Campbell, Director Extension
Division, Georgia State Col
lege Of Agriculture
A moving picture outfit is now be
ing used by the Extension Division of
the Georgia State College of Agri
culture to convey messages of im
proved agriculture to rural Georgia.
An auto truck carrying the apparatus
is utilized for producing the power
that operates a dynamo which, in turn,
provides the light for the moving pic
ture machine. The power is suffi
ciently strong to make as good a
light as can be found in any moving
picture theater.
This enables the College to go out
into the country and show pictures in
school houses, and reach many peo
ple who never yet have seen a moving
picture. No difficulty is met in getting
crowds, and, of course, a splendid op
portunity is afforded for bringing lo
bear a message, which doubtless,would
not be obtained in any other way—
upon a whole neighborhood at one
time and in one place.
Exhibitions are given both day and
night, thus giving opportunity of
reaching two neighborhoods a day.
Arrangements are made in advance
with the county superintendent of
schools, who designates the schools
where the exhibition is to be made
and assists in making proper an
nouncements. Where a county dem
onstration agent is located he will also
have a part in local arrangements.
The moving picture outfit began op
erating in south Georgia and will
move gradually northward. Of course,
it will be impossible to go into every
school house in the state or evei
reach every county in the state soon.
Thinning Fruit Is Profitable
T. H. McHatton, Professor Horticul
ture, Georgia State College Of
Ag riculture
If after the young fruits drop—usu
ally in May—there remains too many,
thinning should be practiced. Thin
by hand, a stick is not discriminat
ing. Thin peaches when about the
size of the thumb, before the stone
hardens. Leave peaches 4 to 6 inches
apart on tree, the distance depending
upon the size of the fruit when ma
tured. They must not touch.
Apples should be thinned after the
“drop,” and when the apples are be
tween a quarter and a half dollar in
size. Only one to a cluster should be
left.
Depending upon the size of tree and
set of fruit, it will cost from 5 cents
to 25 cents to thin a tree.
The advantages of thinning are,
a thinned tree does not break down
because the apples are better distrib
uted over it; the loss of fruit is little
or nothing while the quality and quan
tity of large fruit Is greatly increas
ed, and the returns greater. Thinned
trees set a better crop of fruit for
the next year. Fungous diseases are
not so destructive because fruits are
not allowed to touch each other. Be
cause of thinning the poor fruit is
handled and gotten out of the way
before the rush of the harvest season
when otherwise the poor fruit would
have to be handled and sorted. The
thinned fruit can be fed to the stock.
TRADE NARK REGISTERED
PHOSLIME
FOR
COTTON
Use It
And Get Results
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Prices F. O. B. Phoslime, Fla., in Bags
CARLOAD
$9.00 Per Ton
FLORIDA SOFT PHOSPHATE & LIME COMPANY
BOX 462 OCALA, FLORIDA
Board Tells How To Kill
Truck Crop Pests Cheaply
Atlanta, Ga. —Truck farming and
home gardening in Georgia are re
ceiving more attention each year and
steadily growing in importance. Mel
ons, cabbages, peas, onions and succu
lent home-grown vegetables will add
to the prosperity of thousands of Geor
gia families, both in country and town,
this spring and summer. But inciden
tally these crops also will be the
means of supporting several -million
bugs, spiders, worms, beetles and oth
er pests, in a life of sinful ease at the
expense of the truck farmer, unless
he declares war on them in time and
applies the preventive measures recom
mended by the State Board of Ento
mology.
State Entomologist E. Lee Worsham
has had prepared by his department
a bulletin in the form of an illustrated
booklet on truck crop pests in Geor
gia, which the board will be glad to
send to any Georgia farmer or gar
dener on request.
He also offers the following prac
tical directions for use this spring,
which show that while insect pests
are an important factor to contend
with in truck farming, they can be
controlled with few exceptions at com
paratively little expense.
Root knot., which affects metonß,
celery, beans, beets, cucumbers, pota
toes and similar crops, may be con
trolled by fumigating the seed beds
with carbon bisulphide, the process be
ing to punch nine or ten holes per
square yard, about a foot deep, and
pour into each about a tablespoonful
of carbon bisulphide, filling the open
ing quickly and tramping under foot.
Another method is to sterilize the
earth with formalin, saturating the
soil thoroughly with one part of for
malin to 100 gallons of water, as deep
as the roots will penetrate.
The harlequin cabbage bug, so call
ed because of his black, orange and
yellow markings, can be controlled
only by contact poisons. Thoroughly
cleaning and burning up all trash dur
ing the winter will destroy many hi
bernating adults. Early planted mus
tard makes a good trap plant. Pure
kerosene should be used when the
trap plants become thoroughly infect
ed, and a fifteen per cent kerosene
emulsion can be applied with success
on growing crops, especially in the
immature stages of the insect.
The squash bug, which is a little
over half an Inch long, dark brown
above and yellow! h beneath, passes
the winter unde:* tubbith and comes
forth in the spring to deposit con
spicuous fcrown c.r,\o:r \ eggs. All .u’j
Low Fares to
ATLANTA
Account
I. O. O. F. Grand Encampment
And Rebekah assembly
MAY 23-25
$1.65 R Tl Trip Jackson
Tickets on sale May 21. 22, 28. Good returning until May 29
R. L. Baylor, D. P. A., Atlanta
J. S. Blood worth, T. P. A., Macon 5
Southern Railway
Less Than Carload
SIO.OO Per Ton
WRITE FOR BOOKLET
blsh should be burned in the winter.
Young newly hatched bugs may be
killed with a spray of ten per cent
kerosene emulsion or “Black I-ioaf
40.”
Plant lice, or aphids, a group of in
sects which attack a great variety of
crops, including melons and cabbages,
may be generally controlled effectively
by spraying with "Black Leaf 40,” a
nicotine tobacco product, using one
part to from 300 to 690 gallons of
water. Soap solution at the rate of
one pound to three or four gallons of
water is alsjp a reliable remedy. The
spray should be applied as a mist and
with considerable force.
The mole cricket, one of the most
serious truck farm pests, Is best han
dled in a given area by plowing up
the breeding areas two or three times
during the months of April, May and
June. Banding indivMim# phnrtu Wltft
paper or tin eytfodor affords absolute
protection. Poisoned baits made of
cotton seed meal with arsenate of lead!
or Paris green have proven beneficial
The cut worm is a nocturnal' marau
der which few gardens have escaped.
Preventive measures are best, and as
grass is their natural food, garden and
sod land to be planted In truck
should be plowed and thoroughly pul
verlaed during the winter before plant
ing. Trapping them may be accom
plished by boardß under which they
crawl, or by puaeMog botes In the
soil near each plant with a stick. Poi
soned baits nay also be used with
success. Full directions will be glv
en by the State Board of Entomology
on request.
The web worm, a comparatively
new pest in Georgia, feedb on the
crown or at the base of the leaves
of turnips, cabbages and'beets. Spray
ing with arsenate of lead is effective,
with two pounds to fifty gallons of
water.
Cabbage worms and loopers should
be fought by dusting cabbage plants
with arsenate of lead or Paris green
mixed with air slaked lime. The arse
nate of lead should be used at the rate
of one ■ pound. to' five’ pounds’ of- ntt
slaked lime and Paris green at. the
rate of one ounce to one pound of
lime. It is best, applied by shaking
a thin cloth sack directly over the
plants, coating the leaves uniformly
with poison dust.
Arsenical sprays are also effective
against cucumber beetles and flea bee
tles which affect a great variety of
plants. The State Board of Entomol
ogy wili furnish full f no addition'll
f lrmulas and instructions to any one
who will write for them