Newspaper Page Text
In order to give the public REAL Auto, Truck, Tractor and Gas Engine SERVICE without
having to go to Macon or Atlanta, we wish to ANNOUNCE we are PREPARED to take care of any
REPAIR JOB in this line, here in Barnesville.
Our Service is run different to that of any other shops in Barnesville. Instead of charging SI.OO
per hour for time, we charge only 75c per hour on a few jobs, but in most cases we will tell you
what a job will cost you before it is done, then our customers will know what his bill will be. >
We can afford to do this because there is no GUESS work and no EXPERIMENTING on your
car. We are equipped to do a job BETTER, QUICKER and more SATISFACTORY BECAUSE
WE HAVE A WRENCH TO FIT ANY NUT on ANY make of AUTO, TRUCK, TRACTOR or
GAS ENGINE. We have a Crankshaft Turning Machine, Reboring Machine, Micrometers, set of all
size Reamers, Rear Axle Stands, Motor Benches and other Testing Equipment. This equipment is
for BETTER SERVICE AT A MORE REASONABLE COST TO OUR
CUSTOMERS.
We overhaul a motor and Guarantee it for 60 days against any defect in workmanship. When
we grease a car, we grease it thoroughly.
TRY US ON YOUR NEXT JOB AND YOU WILL SEE THAT YOU
GET YOUR MONEY’S WORTH.
-TRY US NEXT
ESLYN HORNE
43-47 Market Street Barnesville, Georgia
MR. E. STALLINGS ILL
Mr. EUsberry Stallings, one of La
mar county’s esteemed citizens, liv
ing near the Sugar Hill plantation,
had a partial stroke of paralysis one
day last week and is in more or less
critical condition. He is receiving
every attention from his physician,
Dr. J. A. Corry, and the members
of his family and his friends, and
the earnest hope is expressed that he
will recover from his illness.
DONTLOSE
ANOTHER HAIR
3 5c “ Da nde rine” Saves Your
Hair—Linds Dandruff!
Delightful Tonic
Don't lose another hair! Don’t
tolerate destructive dandruff. A lit
tle Danderine now will save your
hair; thicken and strengthen it;
double its beauty.
Falling hair never stops by itself.
Dandruff multiplies until it forms a
misty scale, destroying the hair,
roots and all, resulting in baldness.
Your druggist will tell you that
“Danderine” is the largest selling
hair saver in the world because it
corrects and. tones sick, ailing hair
of men and women every time. Use
one bottle of Danderine, then if you
find a single falling hair or a par
ticle of dandruff you can have your
money back.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE CTebleU.l It
■tops the Cough and Headache an<l w°rkoff the
RZT r.vfiGROVES agostureoffeachbox. 30c.
NOTICE—CITY ORDINANCE
ATTENTION IS CALLED TO
CITY ORDINANCE PROHIBITING
FOWLS AND CATTLE TO RUN
AT LARGE. COMPLAINTS ARE
BEING MADE THAT COWS AND
CHICKENS ARE DAMAGING PUB
LIC AND PRIVATE PROPERTY
AND OWNERS OF SAME ARE
WARNED TO SEE THAT ABOVE
ORDINANCE IS OBSERVED.
—MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL.
PEPPER SHIPMENTS OVER
With the car last Saturday the
pepper shipments probably ended for
Lamar county for 1922. Mr. H. A.
Cliett, County Agent, reports the
shipment of eleven cars from Bames
ville, six from Griffin and one from
Yatesville, making a total of eighteen
cars shipped, consisting of ripe and
green Piemento pepper, which does
not include the vast quantities which
wore carried to the Pomona Products
Cos., at Griffin. When the Griffin
company had more pepper offered
them than they could use, another
market was found for these addition
al car shipments, which amounted
really to a “pickup” for the growers.
The price paid was only one cent a
pound but it helped wonderfully, the
receipts running around S3OO to
$350 a car. I
Pepper growers of Lamar county
are convinced that there is a reason
able profit in growing pepper pro
vided a market can be secured. Just
what will be done in the growing of
pepper for 1923 is yet uncertain, but
it is to be hoped arrangements may
be made for growing a good acreage
in Lamar county.
IF STOMACH IS
TROUBLING YOU
Instantly! End Indigestion
Stomach Misery with
“Pape’s Diapepsin”
As soon as you eat a tablet or two
of “Pape’s Diapepsin” your indiges
tion is gone! Heavy pain, heartburn
flatulence, gases, palpitation, or any
misery from a sour, acid stomach
ends. Correct your stomach and di
gestion for a few cents. Each pack
age guaranteed by druggist
SERVICE
AILING WOMEN
OF MIDDLE AGE
Mrs. Linton Tells How Helpful
Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable
Compound is at This Period
Denver Colorado. —“I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
lllllllllllllllllllll P oun dforsevenvears
and I cannot tell you
(jgfflKiLfgfijl always keep a bottle
of it in the house,
Hjjjl ii H for lam at that time
band saw your ad. in
the papers and said
1 have taken
everything you can think of, now I want
you to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound! ’ So I let him get it,
and I soon felt better and he told me ‘I
want you to take about six bottles. ’ So
I did and I keep house and do all my
own work and work out by the day and
feel fine now. I tell every one about
the Vegetable Compound, for so many
of my friends thought I would not get
well. ’ Mrs. R. J. Linton, 1850 West
33d Avenue, Denver, Colorado.
After reading letters like the above,
and we are constantly publishingthem,
why should anv woman hesitate to take
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound if she is in r.eedof help? It brings
relief where other medicines fail.
SANITY IN
DIVERSIFICATION
(From Savannah Morning News)
Little comment is necessary on the
plan for diversification, a specific and
definite program of diversification,
as urged in Lamar county, one of the
new counties of the section of the
state a little* to the north of what is
known as South Georgia, a section in
which the boll weevil is just now
fairly getting in his fiercest work.
The county of Lamar is urging this
program in a half page advertisement
in the Bamesville News-Gazette, a
newspaper which for many years has
been a steady force for constructive
progress in its section:
“Fight the boll weevil! Make cot
ton in spite of him! The following
is suggested as a farm program for
Lamar county for 1923: One-horse
farm unit—three to six good milch
cows, purebred recommended; two
to three good sows, purebred recom
mended; twenty to forty brood hens,
purebred recommended; ten acres in
corn, velvet beans and N. C. pea
nuts; five acres in oats, followed with
peas or other hay crop; four acres
in wheat, followed with Spanish pea
nuts; five acres in peanuts or water
melons; three acres in sweet pota
toes and cane; two to five acres in
pepper; five acres in cotton, follow
early with grain; twelve acres in per
manent carpet grass, Dallas and
Lespedeza. This will bring perma
nent prosperity to Lamar county and
its citizens.”
That is a fine program for that sec
tion. It could be varied a little in
the more southerly sections. The
stress is properly placed upon the
cow, the sow and the hen—and upon
the “purebred” recommendation.
The News-Gazette editorially says:
“The News-Gazette does not want
to appear unnecessarily persistent in
its advocacy of a diversification
plan of farming for the farmers of
Lamar county and of this section, but
such a plan is so absolutely necessary
and our concern for their welfare so
intense that we find it hard to re
frain from continued discussion of
the question. We have said from the
beginning and repeatedly that no
farmer should abandon the effort to
raise some cotton, for we have never
doubted that cotton can and should
be produced on every farm, but at
the same time other products should
he made. Along with a reasonable
acreage in cotton to be planted and
cultivated according to directions for
boll weevil conditions, every farmer
should grow for sale some hogs, some
chickens, perhaps a few cows, a few
acres in groundpeas, if he has suit
able soil, a few acres in pepper, and,
of course, corn, oats and wheat and
probably other things, such as peas,
cane, potatoes, melons, fruits, nuts,
etc. There is money in growing cot
ton, even under boll weevil condi
tions when proper directions are fol
lowed but there is money in these
*
other products when grown as help
ers. The negro as a laborer may
never be as valuable to the farms of
this section as he has been in the
past, but if this new condition will
populate our state with white people
who own and operate their own small
farms it will mean anew and a far
better era than has ever before been
known for us. It will mean work
for the people as a whole but it will
bring such prosperity and happiness
as we have never experienced in the
past.”
What Lamar county is doing is
what South Georgia counties proper
have been doing for the past several
years—ever since the boll weevil in
his ravages became a fact. The same
program with suitable modifications
to meet local soil and market and
climatic conditions could be followed
in any and every other county—and
with the same prospectively certain
result, “permanent prosperity.”
CORNS'
Lift Off with Fingers
■FI
ra
' <f f
Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little
“Freezone” on an aching corn, in
stantly that corn stops hurting, then
shortly you lift it right off with fin
gers. Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft com,
or com between the toes, and the
calluses, without soreness or irrita
tion.—Adv.
CHAPPEL NEWS
The many friends of Mrs. A. H.
Chappel are very glad to know that
she is improving very much.
Mr. J. H. Norris made a business
trip to Barnesville Tuesday of last
week.
A large crowd attended the sing
ing given by Miss Lizzie English
Sunday night.
Mrs. Edmund Mullins spent Wed
nesday of last week with her sister,
Mrs. A. H. Chappel.
Mrs. J. F. Gardner visited Mrs. T.
V'. Mann of Unionville Thursday.
Mr. A. H. Chappel made a business
trip to Bamesville last Thursday.
Mrs. J. F. Fox visited Mrs. A. H.
Chappel Wednesday.
Mrs. W. M. McElhenney of West
Butts visited Mrs. H. L. Thornton
last Friday.
The party given by Misses Ruth
and Vivian Fox was enjoyed by all
that attended, which was a very large
crowd.
Mr. Herman Dumas made his regu
lar appointment at Miss Ethel Lena
English’s Thursday night.
Misses Neva and Kittie Norris had
as their guests Friday night Misses
Nellie and Carrie English.
Mrs. H. A. Corley visited her fath
er, Mr. C. P. Wilson, last Thursday.
BLUE EYES.
HELP YOURSELF
GET WELL FAST
IF you have been ill, and it seems
as if you never would get your
strength back, you need the won
derful strengthening and rebuilding
qualities of Gude’s Pepto-Mangan.
It has helped thousands of invalids
and convalescents to get back their
strength, put on firm flesh, eat well,
sleep well, feel well and BE well!
Your druggist has Gude’s Pepto-
Mangan—liquid or tablets, as you pre
fer.
Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
ENTERTAINMENT
AT GORDON
Last Saturday evening the Gordon
battalion gave a ball to the girls and
faculty in the Gordon Armory.
The party, which began at about
seven-thirty, was featured by an old
fashioned square dance. This un
usual method of amusement was en
joyed by everyone, and was entered
into by almost the entire school.
Particular praise must be given to
the cadet officers who planned and
arranged for the entertainment.
A TEXAS WONDER
For kidney and bladder troubles,
gravel, weak and lame back, rheu
matism and irregularities of the kid
neys and bladder. At your drug
gist's or by mail, $1.25. Small bot
tle often cures. Send for sworn
testimonials.—E. W. Hall, 2926
Olive St., St Louis, Mo. —Adv.