Newspaper Page Text
County Sanitary Regulations.
To prevent and control the further
spread of typhoid fever,
d j arr jj 0ea> enteritis, colitis, hookworm
and other bowel borne diseases, the
following regulations relative to the
disposal of human excreta have this
date been adopted by the Grady C oun
ty Boaid of Health, in the interest of
the public health of the citizens of the
county, under sections 1670 to 1676
inclusive, of the code of 1910, and
Georgia Laws 1914, pages 124 to 131
(which is known as the Ellis Health
Law.)
Se. 1. All premises not provided
with a sanitary method of human es
creta disposal are hereby declared a
nuisance and detrimental to the public
health.
Sec. 2. No human excreta shall be
deposited upon the surface of the
ground, where it will be exposed to
flieS) fowls or other animals _
^ cc - ^ shall be the duty of the
owner °f every human habitation to
provide such habitation with a sani
tary method of human eexcreta dispo
sal, of a type approved by the county
and State Boards of Health.
Treasury Department
United States
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
ooperation with the State Board
In c Tri-County
of Health and
Health Unit.
Cairo, Ga., October 11th, 1926,
Dear Neighbor:
The following sanitary regulations
were adopted by our County Board of
Health and are sent to you for your
information. Tennessee, Virginia, and
other states are adopting resolutions
like these, and building thousands of
san itary privies. The result is a great
reduction in funeral and doctor bills,
.;, e saving of much suffering and mon
, an d an increase in happiness and
prosperity.
feel that a thoughtful intelli
gent person like ... you will want to take
advantage of this method of proving j
Hs desire to protect his family and
e\ghhors. Please feel perfectly free l
n
.. all upon us for any assistance
nidi we may be able to give you.
Yours for healthful homes,
I. N. Vandergriff, Field Agt..
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i i OCTOBER 23RD ivw B
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X a I x rts of Tiolene a a a
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* To Celebrate the Opening of
Woco-Pep Service Station m
i Corner Bryan and Mitchell Streets, Cairo.
i COME EARLY!
I
How to Get Free Oil m
8 a
i Woco-Pep Service m
Drive into the New
Station. Purchase five gallons of Woco
i Pep or Purol Gasoline. You will be given
a card which entitles you to one quart of m
Tiolene Motor Oil immediately and one m
quart of Tiolene Motor Oil free with each a
s gallons of Woco- m
additional purchase of five m
Pep or Purol Gasoline until four quarts of a
8 Motor Oil have been given a
8 free Tiolene you. a
8 opportunity. Tell a
8 Don't neglect this a
friends about it for we wish everybody a
8 youi • a
..
« in the city to visit this convenient new m
a Woco-Pep Service Station and enjoy the a a
a benefits of this free oil offer. a
8 a
8 a
8 Woco-Pep Service Station a
8 a
a a
8 Distributors of
8 Tiolene Motor Oil. Purol Gaso- a
8 Wn'-o-Pep, line,” Chatterless Oil for Fords a
8 and Woco a
THE CAIRO MESSENGER FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1926.
Sec. 4. Every recreation, construct -
’ 0, L or tourist, camp, or other camp
ing place shall be provided with a san
itary method of excreta disposal and
a sanitary water supply.
Sec. 5. It shall be the duty of the
occupant of every human habitation
or place used for human assembly or
congregation to maintain the human
excreta disposal system in a clean and
sanitary condition at all times.
Sec. 6. That any nuisance detriment
al to the public health shall be abated
after due notice of the county board
of health.
Sec. 7. The County Health Officer
shall determine the time permitted to
abate any nuisance.
Sec. 8. Any person, persons, firm,
or corporation who violates any sec
j i tion of this regulation shall be guilty
i of a misdemeanor, and upon convict
ion therefor shall be fined not less
than $5.00 nor more than $25.00 for
each violation, after due notice from
the county Board of Health, or its
duly authorized agent or agents.
By order of the Grady County Board
of Health, this September 28th, 1926.
ENDORSED BY
J. M. Hughes, Sec‘y. C. C. of C.
J. A. Lindsay, M. I).
A. B. Reynolds, M. D.
J. B. Warnell, M. D.
J. C. Hall, Chrmn. Bd. of C. C.
J. P. Swann, C. S. S.
“Frosty” Peters Promising
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Illinois lias a promising player in
Forest (“Frosty”) Peters. Aside from
his ball-carrying ability, Peters is a
punter anrl drop kicker and is a men
ace to other teams when Illinois gets
inside the forty-yard line.
Elpino School News,
We regret to state that our teacher,
Mrs. Ethel Standridge, is on the sick
| list this week, although she has been
filling her position as principal.
Several from this community en
joyed the sing at Capel Sunday after
noon.
We regret very much to hear of th *
illness of Mr. C. A. Lawrence, who has
recently suffered a stroke of paralysis
We wish for him an early recovery.
Mrs. Ii. H. Hurst spent Sunday af
ternoon with her sister Mrs. Annie
Barrett.
Mr. Carson Rogers was in this com
irunity Sunday
Mr. Tommit! Dees Has the Saturday
nignt ... guest . of , Mr. S. J. T Morey.
' ' s ' -Gumii Chason, and children,
spent Saturday night and Sunday with
Mrs. S. 0. Norton.
Miss Marie Jones spent the week
end with relatives in Cairo.
Mr. and Mrs Spence Shiver were
called to the bedside of their daughter,
Mrs. ,, A. . L. , Dollar, T , „ at . Lakeland, . , . , Fla., ,,,
’ ’ ’
on ues ay, ct. Lith. wl
Mrs. H. ( . Collins, and children,
spent Sunday with Mrs. Jesse Brin
son.
Messrs. Ether Norton, Tom Watson
Faircloth, and Eugene Harrison at
tended the singing convention Sundry !
at Bethel. I
We have Literary and Debating I
our
Society meetings every other Friday. |
This week our subject is: “Resolved,
that airplanes are more useful to man
than automobiles.” Affirmitive: Cleo
Merritt, Mishia Barrett, Hilda Ilursv. ;
Negative: Artie Mae Brinson, Tom- 1
mie Adams and Jewell Reagan. i
|
t
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There’s a treat for you and
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WRIGLEY’S p. k.
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Wrigley’s aids diges
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Try it
L, After Every Meal G129
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»
PERSISTENCE
By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK
Dean of Men, University of
Illinois.
A
ledge of rock at Turkey Run. I looked
up to see where It came from. It was
a full minute before another drop fell,
and then I saw at my feet a hole
worn In the rock upon which I was
standing—a hole which was several
Inches deep made by the action of
this ,ir °P of water and tts fellows,
How many centuries these drops had
•», but 1M.
was the result of persistent effort,
The Grand canyon of the Colorado is
to me the most impressive and stu
pendous natural phenomenai that I
have ever seen. ' Looking down into
its awful depths I shudder. The wom-
1111 standing beside me and seeing the
gorgf ' for th <* lirsl burst lot®
te : irs ’ * l:my h,gh - strun K P p °P le falnt
when they gaze into its bottomless
depths. ,, And yet the Grand canyon a
mile deep and miles and miles across
was formed, geologists tell ns, by th®
constant and persistent action of run
ning water. How many millions of
years it required to erode those solid
rocks we can only guess, but there
it Is, the result of persistent and con
stant. effort.
A friend of mine lias recently at
tained success and international fume
through a scientific discovery which
he has made. The discovery was not
the result of a single effort, but of
years of persistent effort. He started
with a theory which he was convinced
was the correct one. For years he
followed out this theory. Night and
day lie worked to isolate the element
whose discovery he was attempting
only to find himself defeated in each
instance. Thousands of times he per
formed the experiments which he was
convinced would bring him success
only to fail. Ilis scientific friends,
knowing wlmt he was attempting,
joked with him, laughed at him, raised
their eyebrows as it were, when he
passed and inquired more or less de
risively as to ids success. lie felt
sure, however, that lie was on the
right track, and ultimately he suc
ceeded.
He has been written up in all the
scientific journals of the world; he
has been in demand all over the coun
try to tell how lie did a thing that
men for centuries have tried unsuc
cessful y to do. One of the great qual
ities which led him to success was
his persistence.
Myers was married before he
awakened to the fact that if he were
to get on In the world he must have a
better education than he had as yet
secured. He was teaching in a little
village where a college degree was
not considered an essential. He could
not afford to stop work long enough
to go to college, for lie had his family
to support. lie had his vacations, how
ever, and these he could utilize to
advantage. Last June be took his de
gree—proud, happy, and fitted to do
the work for which lie had been pre
paring. It has taken him fifteen years
to do it, but lie bus kept at it.
Almost anyone can accomplish the
Impossible if lie doesn’t grow dis
couraged.
(©. 1926. 'Western Newspaper Union.)
LITTLE drop of water struck
me as I was walking under the