Newspaper Page Text
VISIT OUR
BARGAIN COUNTER
Next Saturday
Special Bargains in Remnants
and Staple goods.
Don’t forget the date, Saturday, November, 15th.
Boys and Girl’s Shop
Clayton Georgia
IMPRESSIONS OF MYj
EUROPEAN TRIP
(Continued from page 1, col 2.)
CLEAN DP
. Jt would pay in money if managers of
homes, farms, stores and other businesses should
giye attention to order and cleanliness in their
establishments.
Heaps of waste material means
untidiness and also means inefficiency. It has
been truly said ‘‘Show me your scrap-pile and I will
show you how your business is.” One coat of rust costs
more than a year’s ware. One farmswaste is composed
of elements which menance the business. Untidy con
cerns begin to slow up, their'men become slovenly,
their work becomes uusound, their output dwindles,
their profits disappear.
System, order, tidiness are profitable in many
.ways.
WE THANK YOU
COME TO SEE US
and GREEN DRUG
COMPANY
CLAYTON, GA.
with their sound and unstrung
nerves, were never at ease.
Night and day there was a rush
in the principle business streets
and at midnight, in the theatri
cal districts, and in spite of a
nine-foot side walk you could
proceed only by inches on ac
count of the multitudes there.
Some might think that is
great life, but give me a circle
of dear ones around the hearth
stone with some life and suffi
cient nights rest and I will let
them have all the shows, chorus
es, comedies and after theatre
suppers and gorgeous displays. ^
A man in overalls, or particu
larly a girl in apron is more at
tractive to me than all pomp,
silks, artificialty and paints,
powder and lip sticks. They
never can approach, iff charm,
healthily reared girls, in their
naturalness as they are in our
mountains. There is where I
experienced my first homesick
ness.
However, what I did enjoy
seeing in New York, was the
wonderful Metropolitan Museum
of Art with its priceless exhibits
of treasures from masters of
past and present generations.
No visitor to New York should
miss giving the time to see all
the collections in the Metropoli-
tanMuseum. Thenthe engineering
skill displayed on all sides in New
York had my admiration. Like
wise the immense harbor, with
the-facilities it afford New York
and the scenes on the Hudson.
If one considers that about
nine million people live in one
city, combining those of New
York and New Jersey, one can
hardly grasp the immensity of
its intricate life. Or shall I use
the word existence, for life?
In my next article, if this has
not bored you, I will take you
on the ocean and maybe give you
a real case of sea sickness. In
the mean time, fortify yourself
for the trip.
(To be continued)
Supreme
in tlieir class.
Soft No. 550
Medium No. 557
Write for trial sample
American Lead Pencil Co.
Mahers of Venus Pencils * 220 Fifth Avc., New York .
FEED AND GROCERIES
Sugar, Flour, Coffee, Lard Cot
ton Seed Meal Hulls Shorts, Corn, Oats
and Hay.-
All at Low Prices.
LEON BLECKLEY
CLAYTON,
Near Depot.
- GEORGIA
ARTIFICIAL LIGHTS IN
CREASE WINTER EGG PRO
DUCTION
Experiments during the past
three yearff'at the State College
have demonstrated that artifi
cial lights, used properly, will
greatly increase winter egg pro
duction and thereby increase
profits.
By lengthening the day by the
use of light, the hens are allow
ed ,tim(j to consume a greater
amount of food and therefore
make more eggs, \
There are, three methods of
using light to make the day
twelve to fourteen hours long,
according to J. H. Wood, profes
sor of poultry husbandry at the
State College and in charge of
the experiments with artificial
illumination, IThe first is to
turn on the lights at four a.ro.
allow them to remain on an hour.
The second method is use light
from six a.m. and keep them on
in the evening until eight o’
clock, The third, called ‘'the
10 lbs.
Silverleaf Lard
10 lbs
Sugar
4 lbs
Coffee
24 lbs ‘‘Point Lace”
The Best Flour made
WE SELL MERCHANDISE
THAT WON’T COME BACK TO
CUSTOMERS THAT WILL
WE OFFER
$1.65
.90
1.35
1.40
When you need flour see us,
for we have plenty to supply your
wants at prices] from $1.00 for
24 lbs. on up.
Just received a car of good bright
7 per cent, meal at $2.25 per 100 lbs.
Feed your hens on Laying Mash if
you want them to lay.
Also we have plenty of new crop White
Beet Pulp.
DERRICK & BEARDEN
CI.AYTON GEORGIA
evening lunch method” and
which has proved the most popu
lar in the eastern states is to
turn the iights on at eight in the
evening and allow them to re
main an hour.
At the College the first meth
od has been used, and it was
found that birds under light laid
from thirty to sixty per cent
more than birds not under light.
Prof. Word advises the use
of lights on either pullets or hens
when the object is market egg,
but says they should not be used
on breeders until the breeding
season, and they pre not gener.
ally needed in Georgia at that
time. It takes about two weeks
for lights to effect egg produc-
duction.
HAVE YOU VISITED MY
STORE YET?
IF NOT, IT WILL PAY YOU TO
DO SO, AND SEE SOME OF
. THE BARGAINS I AM
OFFERING
I have a new supply of dress goods,
and the price at which I am selling them
will surprise you. They’re fine for win
ter wear.
Also, I have a good line of sweaters that will
feel mighty good in the cold weather that is com
ing. Call in and see them. They’re selling at a
bargain.
M. L. KEENEk
DRY GOODS & GROCERIES.
CLAYTON
GEORGIA
Try This Yourself
"When n man is trying to catch your
eye and Interest you,” says Fenwick,
"and you don’t want to be Interested,
ull you have to do Is to look with
both your eyes straight at the bridge
of his nose. Then lie can never hook
yon. But If you want to hook the
other fellow, look with both your eyes
Into just one of his. This simple littld
trick has relieved mo of many terrors
of self-consciousness and embarrass
ment”—George Allan England.
Odd Flag of Tibet
The national flag of Tibet takes n
bit of memorising. The middle of the
flag contains a gold sun rising above
a white mountain; on the mountain
there are tw;o lions in white, green and
red, and between the lions n jewel and
a flaming gem. Any space left over
in the flag Is filled with alternate
triangles of red and blue.
GEORGIA’S PRODUCERS
HAVE LIKE INTERESTS
Farmer is Partner With Utility
In Common Cause of Creat
ing Primary Wealth of
State
There is a closely knit bond of mu
tual interest between the farmers of
Georgia and the public utility com
panies which makes of them an eco
nomic unit. It is a fact worthy of
investigation and study. Let us see.
Both are producers of essential,"
primary wealth. Both are subject
for the prosperity to the same natural
law.
Where other forms of industry
deal with the conversion of raw ma
terials into finished products, the
farmer and the public utility com
pany produce those raw materials.
That is, they release and combine the
natural forces which produce. This
is as close as man has been able to
come to the act of creation.
The fanner and the public utility,
then, may both call themselves by the
proud name Of creators.
Consider:
(a) The farmer prepares his soi^
sows his, seed, cultivates and finally
gather the ripened crop and distrib
utes it. ^
(b) The public utility builds its
power house or gas plant and pro
duces energy in the form of electricity
or gas and distributes it.
Both make use of certain natural
forces for the benefit of the world
and- incidental benefit to themselver.
Essentially, actually, there is no dif
ference between the utility’s service
and that of the farmer to the people
of Georgia. Both deal in the funda
mentals of mnterial life; both may be
termed Alchemists creating what
others must have in order to livo or
work or achieve or to build.
When the fact of this partnership
—this community of Interest-is fully
understood that we will have removed
from Georgia’s pathway to progess
its greatest single -obstacle. For the
first obligation of any partnership is
a willingness to understand and to
work together.
UTILITIES INFORMATION COM.
MITTEE OF GEORGIA -g
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