Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1923
THE BUSY CORNER
SELF 1 SERVICE
Gives you all the milk in the cocoanut. No bookkeepers, no office expense, no delivery, abso
lutely on the Cash and Carry plan. If you are looking for high class merchandise out of a well kept,
sanitary place at money saving prices we are the folks. Why shouldn’t we save you money buying
in large quantities as we do with the ready cash? Answer for yourself.
PASS WORD-PAY AND XOXE
Look out for the Busy Corner alley for your feedstuff and case goods. This will open in a few
days with Mr. Loyd White in charge.
Grocery Specials
For Saturday, January 20th
48 Lb Sack Miss Dixie Self Rising QQ
Flour for ipLOO
24 Lb Sack Miss Dixie Self Rising AQ
Flour for .VO
48 Lb Sack Capitola Plain (M O')
Flour for <pLOZ
24 Lb Sack Capitola Plain A A
Flour for .V 4
24 Lb Sack PostelPs Elegant High
Grade Plain Flour for tpLZII
1 Lb Pkg Blue Ridge Coffee |Q
for .10
1 Pound and 4 oz Pkg Quaker f Al„
Oats for llf2t
Quart Size Wesson Oil Al~
for 4IC
Pint Size Wesson Oil 24c
Specials for Wednesday, January 24
1 Lb Cans Calumet Baking Powder for 23c
3 Lb Cans Maxwell House Coffee for 99c
10 Lbs Irish Potatoes for 19c
Fresh Post Toadies per pkg 07c
Fresh Full Cream Cheese per pound 33c
Fresh Kingan’s Bacon per pound 40c
Eradicate The Cowless, Sow
less and Chickenless Farms
With the beginning of the New
Year, and the rather bitter expe
rience of the average farmer dnr
ing the past two years, there is se
rious thought abroad in the land as
to how the farmer can better him
self during 1023. la the past cotton
has been the principal money crop
of the South. On the other hand,
cotton alone, even without the boll
weevil, never did make a prosper
ous farming community, and it is
doubly sure that with the boll wee
vil it never will bring general pros
perity to a section.
In many sections of the South
“T USED Cardui for pears
and it did me more good
than any medicine I ever
used,” writes Mrs. M. C.
Ragsdale, of Fort Towson,
Okla. *i used to suffer with
womanly trouble that weak
ened me until I was a mere
shadow, nervous, and could
not sleep. I did not feel like
1 could live.
“It seemed that nothing
helped me till I heard of
Cardui and began to use it It
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
■ Ml
"Built Me Up”
noteworthy improvement in livci
stock development has occurred in
the last 10 years. No section of the
United States has had bigger pcr
centagi of improvement in the
quality and numbers of animals
maintained than the South. On the
other hand, most of these improve
ments have come on the farms of
the relatively well-to-do, and the
average farmer, constituting 90
per cent of our rural population,
has not made the progress which is
desirable.
According to the last United
States census report there were
strengthened me and, at ’twas
recommended to do, it regu
lated and built me up till 1
was like another woman."
If you are weak, run-down
and feel that you need atonic,
take Cardui, the woman’s
tonic, the tonic about which
you have always heard, the
tonic that helps weak women
regain their strength.
Cardui acts on the womanly
system and helps relieve pain
and discomfort due to female
ailments.
Try Cardui, today, for your
trouble.
THE JACKSON PROGRESS-ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
Army Department
450 Pairs Men’s Dress Shoes, popular selling
toes, good styles, dark tan color, $4.50 value
everywhere. Special this week
$3.39
2,000 Pairs Marching Shoes with or without
hob nails. These are the best shoes on earth
for farm uses, waterproof
$2.98
$2.00 O. D. Wool Shirts, reclaimed 98c
Men’s Army Athletic Underwear, NEW,
shirts and drawers, special 35c
Worth at
Men’s Army Athletic all Wool Underwear,
shirts and drawers, special 69c
Worth at least $1.50 per garment
Dry Goods Department
Silk and Wool Ladies Hose, $4.00 value $2.95
Silk and Wool Ladies Hose, $2.50 value $1.48
Silk and Wool Ladies Hose, $1.50 value 98c
5000 Yards Fine Lace Insertion, 5 yds for 10c
5000 Yards Embroidery Insertion, 5 yds for 10c
J& P Coats Spool Cotton (150 yds) 4c spool
Homore coins
&
Do,* neglect it
Stop that cough now with this
simple treatment that heads oft
the development of serious ail
ments. It soothes inflamed, ten
der tissues, loosens hard-packed
phlegm and breaks the cold.
Now —stop that cough in timo
—ask your druggist for
DR.KJNGS DISCOVERY
-a syrup for coughs & colds
310,732 farms in Georgia. Of this
number, loss than one farm out of
five have any beef cattle on them.
Less than one farm out of every
three have any dairy cattle on them.
There were hogs on only 81.4 per
cent of the farms. Of sows or gilts
six months old or over, there were
less than one for each two farms.
There were more than 10 per cent
of the number of farms in Georgia
without poultry of any description
on them.
According to these there
were 115,473 farms in Georgia
without milk cows, or heifers above
two years old on them. There were
185,421 farms without brood sows
or gilts; 32,291 farms were without
poultry. Surely there can be no
average satisfactory living condi
tions on farms in Georgia as long
as one out of three farms has no
possibility of milk, more than one
half of the farms are without hogs,
and only nine out of ten of the
farms maintain any poultry.
The “Live at Home” slogan has
been worn threadbare, bat the
soundness and wisdom it implies is
truer today than when it was first
enanciated.
After the home demand is satis
fied, the benefits and profits derived
from this small amount of live
stock will be so apparent that in
•very community a4 section a eur
plus will be produced. A brood row,
a dairy cow for every plow main
tained on the farm, a small flock of
chickens, and a half acre of .garden
for every family living in the coun
try will hasten the return of pros
perity.
Marketing is a complicated and
serious problem, but whenever the
South produces a surplus of any
farm commodities a satisfactory
marketing scheme will be provided.
Livestock production is the essen
tial need today, and it should be
based first on the needs of the farm
home. After this is taken care of
a surplus should and will be pro
duced that will constitute a source
of net cash returns. Today the
milk cow, the brood sow, and the
hen are the most valuable allies, of
the Southern farmer.
DR. MILTON JARNIGAN,
Professor of Animal Industry, Geor
gia State College of Agriculture.
POULTRY EXPERTS IN JACKSON
Mrs. M. Hendricks and Miss Ada
Heironimus will be in Jackson for
some time making a survey of the
poultry raised in this vicinity.
These ladies made a special study
cf poultry culture and are prepared
to help poultry raisers in and around
Jackson on such problems as cull
ing, feeding of moulting hens and
other poultry problems.
While in Jackson these ladies will
call on all the poultry raisers to
take up these important problems.
The enterprise of the Etheridge-
Smith. Cos., has made it possible for
the poultrykeepers to get the bene
fit of the exeprience of these ex
perts.
SPALDING SUPERIOR COURT
BEGINS TWO WEEKS GRIND
The January term of Spalding
county superior court was convened
in Griffin Monday. It is expected
the session will continue for two
weeks. Criminal cases will be taken
up the second week, the first week
being devote! to the hearing of civil
busißWß.
Clothing Department
Stetson Hats', 75 in number, that sold up to
$12.50, to go on special sale this week
$4.98
Small lot Sunday Shirts that sold up to $15.00.
While they last, special this week
$1.98
One big lot nice Men’s Sunday Hats that sold
up to $8.50. On special sale this week
$2.48
One big lot Men’s 220 Overalls, heavy
quality, value today $1.75 to $2.00, size 32 to 42
$1.39
One lot Men’s Half Hose that sold up to $2.00.
Special this week
49c
Boys Union Suits that sold up to $1.75 and
$2.00. Special this week
73c
STORAGE OF SWEET
POTATOES IN STOCK
REPORT SHOWS THAT THE
STOCKS FOR 1922 WERE LESS
THAN IN 1921. FEW STATES
SHOW A GAIN
Storage stocks of 2,895,000 bush
els of sweet potatoes on December
15, 1922, are reported to the Unit
ed States Department of Agricul
ture by 1,272 sweet potato storage
houses in 22 states. Storage stocks
December 15, 1921, in tbe houses
reporting were 2,985,000 bushels.
The bulk of the potatoes reported
in most of the states are in com
mercial warehouses but in a few
states a number of reports from
farm storage houses are included.
Increased storage stocks are
shown in New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina
and • South Carolina. Decreased
stocks are shown in Georgia, Flor
ida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana,
Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky, Ok
lahoma, Texas, Indiana, Illinois and,
New Mexico. The storage capacity j
of the storage houses reporting was
6,496,000 bushels in 1922 compared
with 6,179,000 bushels in 1921, an
increase of about 3 per cent. The
total storage capacity reported rep
A Good Thing—-Don’t Miss It
Send your name and address plain
ly written together with 5 cents
(and this slip) to Chamberlain Med
icine Cos., Des Moines, lowa, and re
ieive in return a trial package con
taining Chamberlain’s Cough Reme
dy for coughs, colds, croup, bron
chial, “flu” and whooping coughs,
and tickling throat; Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver Tablets for sto
mach troubles, indigestion, gassy
pains that crowd the heart, bilious
ness and constipation; Chamber
lain’s Salve, needed in every family
for burns, scalds, wounds, piles, and
skin affections; these valued family
medicines for only 6 cents. Don’t
miss EL adv.
resents about one-half the tota
storage capacity of the country.
This is the first sweet potato
storage report in anew service es
tablished by the United States De
partment of Agriculture with a
(view to giving producers a more
comprehensive idea of the market
ing situation. The next report will
be issued March 1, when an effort
will be made to obtain returns from
a larger number of houses. There
after it is contemplated to issue the
reports monthly.
Blackheaded
Pimples Quit
WithS.S.S.
Why? Pimple-Poison Goes When Red*
Blood-Cells Incresset S. S. S.
Builds TheMßed-Bfood-CeU*.
Ton can bo sore of this, nature has no
substitute for reil-blood-cclls. Pimple
poison can't live in tbe red rivers of your
blood as long as there are enough rich
red-blood-cells ia it. More red-blood-cells l
ofablemishedjacel
That is what yon need when you see plm>
pies staring at yon in the mirror. Black
beaded pimples are worse! Eczema i
worse yet! You can try everything under
the sun,—yon'U find only one answer,
more cell-power in your blood! The tre
mendous resultsL produced by an increase
la red-blood-cells is one of the A. B. C’s
of medical science. Red-cells mean
dear-pure rich blood. Tbey mean dear,
ruddy, lovable complexions. Tbey mean
nerve power, because all your nerves an
ted by your blood. Tbey mean freedom
forever from pimples, from the blackhead
pest, from boUa, from ecvema and skin
ernptions, from rheumatism Impurities.,
from that tired, exhausted, run-down feel
ing. Red-blood-cells are tbe most Impor
tant thing in tbe world to each of us.
8. 8. S. will build them for you. 8. 8. ft
has been known since 1826, as one of tbe
greatest blood-builders, blood-cleanser?
and system strengthened ever produced.
S. 8. S. is sold at all drug stores 1a tvij
dzes. The larger alas bottle is the more
STS.S.