The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941, December 21, 1922, Image 3

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pet Contents lSfluid Dracfa? ’ . 1 11 ALCOHOL-3 PER AvertablePrcparation&rAs , ,* b yßegul- ; | There^lMnoiinpi^sfea| i Cheerfulness and Rest Coataab 1 neither Opium,Morphine nor 1 1 Mineral. Not Narcotic * JbfyafQliwiiSAMLElfG&Hß tPimplan Se*f V Sertiut \X |, Pock Ut Sett* I I 1 MistStetl I 1 lisH ( I Clarified Sugar 1 I Hblnjrun/hnr f 1 Ahelpfulßemedyfor E JI Constipation and Diarrhoea,, ! I and Feverishness and | I loss °F Sleep i | J fpsultin^hercfro^l™^-1 | TacSm^^^. ot | |! Ihe J firi * Jo i/ vrnli-f • rntv •.< i-'oti. .s. fWinAi Dt SOMN<.. ' iCqnseguencias (fetfl.-na <nfancia. ..NEW VK. , I Exact Copy of Wrapper. WESLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL f| Wesley Memorial Hospital was established for three purposes: to care for and heal the sick, to train nurses and to furnish facilities for medical education. To accomplish the first object, splendid rooms and equipment have been provided. Every room has hot and cold running water and some have private baths. Large operating rooms, splendid laboratories and ample X-Ray facili ties. Splendid diet kitchens are provided. The grounds and the sun parlors tend to the rest, comfort and healing of patients. Nurses are taught by splendidly qualified instructors. Preceding this, acceptable applicants for admission to the training school must have had lour years of high school'training The course in the training school embraces didactic, laboratory and practical work. Spiritual and ethical training will go hand in hand with professonal training. This is one of the hospitals used in the teaching of students in Emory University. Through that it contributes to the promotion of medical science. Rich and poor alike are received—patients who can pay nothing and those who pay for the best rooms in the house, and they all get the same food and the same attention. Through offerings made in the congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, funds are provided for the charity work of the hospital. _ | The location of the hospital is five and one-half miles from the center 'of Atlanta, in a beautiful residents section. It is convenient to street cars. s and has every facility for comfort and convenience. IF SICK, TODAY! i TAKE NO CALOMEL “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Straightens You Up Better Than Salivating, Dangerous Calomel and Doesn’t Upset You—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work—Read Guarantee I discovered a vegetable compound that does the work of dangerous, sickening calomel and I want every reader of this paper to buy a bottle for a few cents and if it doesn t straighten you up better and quicker than salivating calomel just go back to the store and get your money back. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your thirty feet of bowels of the sour bile and constipation poison which is clogging your system and making you feel miserable. I guarantee that one spoonful of this harmless liquid liver medicine will relieve the headache, biliousness, LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING. CASTORIA Forhif^ts^an^Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always / Bears the /% r" SI T r W (\ Jr * n \W se VA For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. coated tongue, ague, malaria, sour stomach or any other distress caused bv a torpid liver as quickly as a dose of vile, nauseating calomel, besidee it will not make you sick or you from a dav’s work. Calomel is poison—it’s mercury— it attacks the bones often causing rheumatism. Calomel is dangerous. It sickens —while my Dodson’s Liver Tone is safe, pleasant and harmless. Eat anything afterwards, because it can not salivate. Give it to the chil dren because it doesn’t upset the stomach or shock the liver. Take a spoonful tonight and wake up feel ing fine and ready for full day s work. THE STORY OF CALCIUM ARSENATE (By James A. Holloman, in Atlanta Constitution.) What is calcium arsenate? How is it made? From w’hat raw products? What is the process of manufac ture? These are some of the questions that I have frequently been asked; and now that a movement has been begun to establish in Georgia at some convenient place for distribution among farmers, a plant for its manu facture, the answ'ers to these ques tions become of general public inter est. Until three or four years ago the country had not heard of calcuim ar senate. When the boll weevil menace be came acute and bitter experiences had taught the farmers that the little pests would neither migrate to new and greener pastures, after two or three years of doing their worst in a locality, or permit themselves to be bodily exterminated, then the federal government took a decided hand in the situation. Experiment stations were estab lished to master the control of in festation so that a farmer might be able to grow cotton in spite of the weevil. Until this time the experiments had been confined to efforts to eradicate, as a whole, or in sections. When the experiments therefore got down to the practical and basic idea of control arsenic poisons were resorted to, and for several months lead arsenate was seized upon as the most effective method. These experiments necessarily had to take into important consideration the effect of the use of the poisoning powder both upon plant and animal life; and also the most essential con sideration of economy, easiness of manufacture, and supply, and so on. The federal experimental plant and laboratory at Tallulah, La., under the direction of Dr. Code, a young and enthusiastic chemist, entomologist and scientist as well as practical far mer, soon evolved the calcium arsen ate formula for weevil control as d;he most practical, and the one best adapted to the needs, habits, charac teristics, prejudices, etc., of those who had to become its chief users. Experiments to demonstrate the unfailing value of this new prepara tion were continued and now it has been proven, beyond any question or doubt, that the use of calcium arsen ate is essential in weevil control when its use is properly co-ordinated with new cultural methods made even more essential by the conditions aris ing out of weevil infestation— That is to say and to impress, that calcium arsenate of itself will not make cotton, nor will it control the weevil so that old methods of cotton planting and cultivation will be suc cessful. Its use, under proper regulations, which the state board of entomology will furnish, must be a part only of a system of intensive cultivation, a re duced acreage so that the cotton plant may be pushed to maturity and into the fruiting stage by better and more careful farming. Now, what is calcium arsenate? It is, in the language of the farm, and robbed of chemical terms, a com position of agricultural lime and white arsenate —and that is all. The formula is in round figures 40 per cent white arsenate, 35 per cent calcium, and 25 per cent common fillers. The white arsenate is released from the arsenic ores—copper and pyrites—and is regarded in the old time strict appraisement of the cop per miner, as in impurity. It is supplied now in limitless quantities by the copper smelters of the west, the recent demand in the manufacture of calcium arsenate hav ing placed a stiff valuation and price upon what was, until a few months ago, regarded as a waste. There is no doubt white arsenate in abundance in the ores of Georgia and Tennessee, especially in the cop per ores of the latter state, but the manufacture of the same has not been undertaken by any Georgia or Tennessee concern. There is an abundance of arsenical ores in Vir ginia, I am told; also in North Caro lina. Anyway, at the present, while the finished calcium arsenate is consumed entirely in the cotton states, it is manufactured almost entirely in the west from white arsenatq shipped from the copper smelters of the west the Anaconda mines in Montana being the principal supplies. As to agricultural lime— Of course any farmer knows what it is, as it is sold by the fertilizer companies and used in neutralizing acids in the soil. . o TIM Quinta* That D*M Hot Affact th* Head Became of it* tonic *wl laxatlee effect. LAXA TIVE BROMOQUIWINBia better than ordinary Juinine and doe* not c*ae ner-onne** not facing is bend. Remember the full name anu oot lor the ligutiin of U. W, GROVE. JOc FROM YANKEEDOM Permitting the negroes to use the same coaches as the white people above the Mason and Dixon line has practically eliminated the day coach as far as the white folks are con cerned. This necessarily increases the cost of railroad travel to quite a percentage of the whites, as it forces them to pay the extra fare on chair cars and Pullmans, for the Northern whites are as sensitive to the un sanitary condition of coaches occu pied by the average negro as we are down South. There is quite a large movement of the Southern ne groes from the South to the North, and sooner or later the North will come around to our way of thinking on this question, and recognize the fact that social equality between the races is absolutely an impossibility. A trip through the coal section of Tennessee and Kentucky forces me to look at this coal mining question from a different viewpoint. Seeing the little stuffy, unsanitary huts lined up in and along side the moun tain streams which house the miners from the cold weather, and realizing the self-sacrifice, the danger and suf fering which they experience in working way down in the bowels of the earth, makes one sympathize with the miner while we are luxuri ating in front of a warm fire made possible by his hard labor. I know of no class of human beings who are more necessary to the well being of humanity than those who dig, dig, way down in the earth day and night that we may keep warm and com fortable. Can you imagine a farmer in La mar county gathering and husking (shucking) his corn in October and penning it in rai! pens about 10 feet high and leaving it uncovered in the field until next Spring? That’s the way many handle their corn up here in Ohio and Michigan. It keeps per fectly. With us down there I think it would be rotten in 30 days. Again, all farmers here save their corn stalks with the fodder on them and house them for winter feed. In other words a farm up here would thrive upon what we burn and throw away down there. I am somewhat surprised to find that freezing weath er up here kills the tops of Alfalfa just as it does Bermuda grass with us. With us it remains green all winter, but up here the Alfalfa fields look like broom sage fields down there. It comes out next Spring all right, but lookd perfectly dead dur ing the winter. You read in the Southern papers about potatoes (Irish) selling for 18 cents per bushel in Michigan and no buyers. It is true in the extreme northern portion of the state that is a fact, but the question of transpor tation has much to do with that con dition. In Adrian potatoes &re sell ing at 80 cents per bushel and corn at 75 to 80 cents. The farmers in this section have rallied from the de pression of two years ago and there is every evidence now of prosperity and happiness. The farmers up here are more economical and thrifty than with us. A farmer here worth $50,- 000 and out of debt will live on one half of what the same class would down South. Floyd has working in his mill at $lB to S2O per week re tired farmers worth $50,000 to $75,- 000, and their living expenses are still held down to the lowest level. Can you picture such a thing in La mar county. Such a man down South would have two or three ex pensive automobiles and get rid of that $50,000 in a year or two. All life at this stage of the game is a survival of the fittest, and it matters not what you do in this life, success awaits him or her who pursues that line of work for which they are nat urally equipped, provided the best that is in them is given thereto. I don’t know, Mr. Editor, whether your subscribers read all this gush from me or not, but if they get as much pleasure from reading as I do from writing I am satisfied. A. O. MURPHEY. JANUARY SHERIFF SALES GEORGIA—Lamar County. Will be sold at the City Hall, the place where public sales are held, in the City of Barnesville, on the first Tuesday in January next, between the hours of 10 o’clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. M., to the highest bidder for cash, the following property, to wit: 125 bushels of com, more or less, in shuck, and ?”-:d corn to be deliv ered at the place where Thomas Walker fcol.) now resides near Johnstonville in said county. Said property levied on and to be sold to satisfy a fi fa issued from the City Court of Barnesville of Lamar coun ty against Thomas W’aiker in favor of Mrs. M. L. Myrick. This, December 6, 1922. Z. T. ELLIOTT, Sheriff, Lamar County, Georgia. For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world to physic your liver and bow els when you have Dizzy Headache, Colds, Biliousness, Indigestion, or Upset, Acid Stomach is candy-like “Cascarets.” One or two tonight will empty your bowels completely TIRES At a PRICE 34x4 FABRICK $17.50 33x4 “ 16.75 32x4 “ 16.25 30x3 1-2 “ 9.50 30x3 “ 8.50 34x4 CORDS $24.00 33x4 “ 23.50 32x4 “ 22.75 30x3 1-2 “ 13.75 J. W. CARRIKER 12 Zebulon St. Barnesville, Ga. Lumber prices have dropped and beginning to advance. If you need anything in the building line be sure to call on i Barnesville Planing Mill Cos. “Everything To Build With” BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA Fresh Oranges Oranges by the barrel. Oranges by the box, Oranges by the dozen. Apples, large and small,and dandy for them all. BARNESVILLE CASH MARKET Phone 187 Barnesville, Georgia New Fall Novelties Are coining in, consisting of late designs in W A T C H E S, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY and SILVER. Come in and inspect them. J. H. BATE & CO. JEWELERS and OPTOMETRISTS BARNESVILLE, GA. by morning, and you will feel splen did. “They work while you sleep.” Cascarets never stir you up or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and they cost only ten cents a box. Chil dren love Cascarets too. ■ ■ ■