Newspaper Page Text
Ttfc, J, , OBER 23, 1923
BILE OF WON
10 M IN FLOIB
Produced Under 801 l Weev.l
Conditions How Yield
Was Made
’ '
ATHENS, October 23.—That a
bale of cotton per acre can be
produced under boll weevil condi
tions has been demonstrated by
County Agent M. W. H. Collins, of
Floyd county, according to Dr. An
drew M. Soule, president of the
State College of Agriculture, who
has just returned frorti a tour of
inspection. jR
“Mr. Collins had- hundred
farms in Floyd county which were
used as demonstration areas,” said
Dr. Soule, "and forty of these have
already gathered a bale of cotton
per acre. The most modern meth-'
ods of cultivation combined with
the judicious use of calcium arse
nate were employed, nad this is the
explanation for the remarkable suc
cess of the demonstrations. There
is no reason why *this program
should not be extended throughout
t»e state of Georgia and our state
placed on a better financial basis,
and enable it to produce a fair
share of a ready money crop.”
The accomplishment of this end
rests on three fundamentals, accord
ing to Dr. Stule, which he outlined
as follows:
1. The employment of a first
class county agent with scientific
training such as may be obtained at
the State College of Agriculture, in
every county. It is manifest that
new conditions must be met with
new ideas and educated men and
women will be called on to do the
job.
2. The idea of a new agricultu
ral progress must be sold to each
county, not only to the farmers but
to the business men.
3. The county agent must have
the active and permanent support
of the business men of the county.
The Results obtaihed in counties
like Floyd this year were not ac
cidental. It was only through the
*nirit of co-operation between the
county agent, farmers and business
men.
The success of .anv agricultural
program, concluded Dr. Soule, will
uepend on educated leadership;
funds to make this possible; and a
co-ooperative spirit permeating ev
ery phase of the activities of the
community which will make it pos
sible for the people acting as a
unit to put over a definite pro
gram.
health
y/Lilts
by the
Father of
Physical
Culture i
i
i ; wife
• ■ Xz.y.-
b L KNAIUI.
MAC MADDEN
When we consider that it is a part
o! rhe plan of Nature to compel the
human body to breathe in and breathe
‘■'l*! oxygen, without a single mo
ment,cessation, from the time of
birth until the time of death, that
fact alone ought to stamp the act of
breathing as one of tremendous sig
nificance and overwhelming import
ance. What makes us inhale and
what exhale? While we have a large
control over our breathing apparatus,
the principal operation is absolutely
beyond our control or volition and
goes on day and night, asleep or
awake, conscious or unconscious, in
the new-born babe as well as in the
healthy , adult.
In Macfadden's Encyclopedia of
Physical Culture scientists tell us that
tne average adult inhales 4XO cubic
inches of air per minute while at rest.
If he walks four miles an hour, he
draws in five times as much, or 2,400
cubic inches per minute; if he walks
wx miles an hour, he draws in seven
times as much, or 3,360 cubic inches [
per iiiinute.
We have but to look at the func- I
turns of‘breathing to realize its su- I
pi6nfe~itnportance. Theta ate three
i.ntt things mat breathing accom
plishes: First, the elimination of ini
puiities from the blood and at the
same time its revivification. Second,
the warming f the body. Third, it
perfmms the last very needful act in
tlie' piPvdshe* rrf converting the food
tSi'ar hos-drenr digested by the stomach
infer jUUiod for use throughout the
Lod-’.
At-ua, .period of life does the hu
man being so much require fresh air
as in the periods of babyhood, child
hood and growing youth. During
the.-e.eptichs die processes of up-build
ing the hotly are going on continu
ously. We all know how babies and
childrens grow. The most healthful '
•if 'children are those who are taken '
out-of-doors and kept out-of-doors
as much a,s possible, winter and sum- (
nter, from the very hour of their
birth. There is no danger whatever
-in this.course of procedure, even if
the child is weakly,’ provided you
make every pro vision for the warmth
of its, body. See tltat it breathes
through its nostrils,' Wrap its body
up well and leave nature do the rest.
y No sleeping room can be h'al - ’ ' 1
i that doe.' not allow the fid'.& I !
of fresh air to erier. 'f ,
PRESBYTERY MEETS
QUITMAN, October 23.—The
Southwest Georgia Presbytery will
meet here on October 30 and 31.
The Southwest Georgia Presbyery
which was formerly part of the Ma
con Presbytery is composed for twe j
ty churches alid about thirty dele- I
meeting. Several well known ;
speakers have been invited to the ,
.conference and th Quitman church
is planning elaborate and hospita-1
ble entertainment,' »'
DOINGS OF THE DUFFS— Very Amusing to Danny “ -Yv Allman
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TOM, THIS x < • XTXpr/\F)t COMES APART ( PADDY’S STEP-LADDER ) _ / NOT SET- « \
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ADAM AND EVA Vamp By Cap Higgins
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MACON P. O. CLERK
TO PLEAD GUILTY
MACON, Oct. 23.—W. B. F.
I Anderson, for more than twenty
; years clerk in the Macon postof
; office, will enter a plea of guilty
today in United States district
court to a charge of rifling the
mails at the postoffice, it is said.
His case had been continued from
a previous term and when called
today the announcement that the
defendant was ready to enter the
plea was made.
Andersen is charged with taking
decoy letters containing four one
dollar bills.
Paris plans to use its subways
for the removal of rubbish.
United States possesses 40 per
cent of the world’s railroad mile
age.
Monogolia and Manchuria do an
enormous trade in dog skins.
Milk Headquarters
We Receive Milk Daily From the Best Dairies
I Pints I Quarts |
7c 12c
MANY RATTLESNAKES KILLED
Moultrie, Oct. 23.—The number •
of rattlesnakes killed in this coun
ty and surrounding territory es
lipses anything in that respect
since early pioneer days. No the
ory has been advanced for the un-;
usual activity of the venomous
. snakes. Two children near here,
i have been bitten this year and one!
of them died as a result of the bite. I
One man brought into town a rat-,
tier he killed as it attempted to i
cross in front of his automobile,
that was more than six feet long!
and had fifteen rattles.
W. F. SMITH’S NEPHEW
DEAD IN ATLANTA
W. Fred Smith Monday received
a telegram announcing the death
of his nephew, W. T. Holmes, who
was instantly killed in Atlanta in
an automobile accident Saturday
afternoon. Mr. Holmes, in com
pany with friertds had attended a
football- game, and was returning
to the city, when their car collided *
with a street car, Mr. Hqlmys be-'
ing thrown through the windshield,
causing instant death.
He was well known in'Ameritus |
"Billy’’ Smith, having at■ one tinie
been in the employ, of Krdns &
Company, and later with the Glov
er Grocery Company.. During his |
residence in Americus he made his
home with Mrs. W. M. Tullis on :
Church street.
h—
yv-/ The Lawyer
must think on his feet and be logical in his
i arguments. Many lawyers who win their
• J/'l castes confine their drinking to Morning Joy
\ / i Coffee.
y Morning Joy Coffee is an inspiration and
J) helps to keep the brain clear. Ask your
yfyr grocer.
New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd.
Jv New Orleans, La.
<J°y
About three years ago he be
came connected with the Gulf Re
fining ■ M,, of Atlanta. Mr. Holmes
was to have been married in De
cember.
FRANK W. HARROLD
LOCATES IN ATLANTA
Frank W. Harrold, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Harrold, a Univer
sity of Georgia boy, who graduated
from the University of Oxford,
: England, on a Cecil Rhodes schol-i
arship, has located in Atlanta tu ’
! enter t.,e u-A min of Candler, I
I Thomson & Hirsch.
I He graduated from the Univer
sity of Georgia, class of 1920; is 1
a member of the S. A. E. fratern-
; ity; was a Sphinx at the Univer- (
sity; graduated a Pih Beta Kappa,!,
j winning a Rhodes scholarship I,
award, and entering Oxford in the :
fall of 1920. ’
He completed his course there! .
last June with an A. B. degree in i '
Rivals !
/ ■
Did you ever think, that while there have been all sorts of
RIVALS to Bread, it still remains the ONE GREAT FOOD
of the whole world? No matter how loaded with good
things your table may be. your meal will be a failure without
GOOD BREAD.
DOMESTIC BREAD
J/ade z i Clmoricus
Model Bread Co.
r —l~. l- rJ -„
PAGE SEVEN
jurisprudence, and with the det
'gr e of bachelor of civil law, the
highest degree given at Oxford.
While at Oxford he made the
i Oxford boxing team, obtaining the :
nine,” the university lebcea. 4>v
boxing against Cambridge.
He traveled extensive during the
three years he was abroad. He is
widely known throughout the state
by his university connection, hav
ing made a particularly creditable
record at the university. He is
also well known in Atlanta.