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About The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1910)
DO YOU HAVE RAZOR TROUBLES? If you do come to us and we will help you. A. C. OGLESBY & CO. PROGRESS. Look out here comes old Pro gress agai*. Mr. G. M. Adamson and family were the guest of Mr. A.. A. Exam Sun#»y. Miss Nora Foster was the charm ing gne*t of Miss Estelle Foster Stingy. Mr, Stewart Adamson of Mor rows spent Saturday night here with his brother Mr. George Ad am sf a. Miss Kittie Jarrette spent Satur day wigAfc in Dutcktown the guest tv i7. r tflic i:-19 Subscription Offer—Tfee Best I i* i ! C"}\o k 'J Offer Made for tlie New Year \ JL© M C-i? j Z-2 ■■ OMvnßSf ATLAKTA CCTISEITT-.’ AMD THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY V. Vc-r tvi'7 ILsstvsrb alternate FREE OFFERS of UHCLE R23HU?C iiCTTS "V ” or MEAN LI! £; or! fIESGUTt ERN RURALIST, a splendid agricultural paper, or TALKS FROM FARMERS $4.75 TO FfUL’.rIRF, zn s : ..itoni3 of farm wisdom, worth its weight in goiJ. Yo sr cht ice of o::e, ««"»«■ HE’S Sisrs . i.::-fSi, ; SS ®HII : *r Tlie Weekly Constitution —once a week, with each of the above (except that The Weekly Constitution sr.bst: a ted for 1 lie Tri-Weekly) —all for one year for only $1.40. The Tri-Tv eekly Coaetitutiou presents at the pino view the whole area of events. The news of the country, state, nation, and the world is given in ■■> i complete issue, Each week the departments of Farm and Farmers, Woman’s Kingdom, Rural Free De •iVt-ry. I’oultry and others of wide interest, edited by exports, appeal directly to those addressed. -he Weekly Constitution contains all these special features and the difference between it and The Tri- Wceiviy is that the one is issued once a week (on Monday only) and the other three times a week—Monday, Wednesday and Friday. If you want 'The Constitution alone, wlthcut any clubbing offers, you can get The Tri-Weekly Consti tution at $1 per year, or The Weekly at 50c per year, by addressing The Constitution, Atlanta, (la. One sample copy sent free on request, giving with it six of your neighbors. The CoGsliijitlen Is the Paper for Rural Free Delivery Rocks A dab of 40 or 50 or more will keep an R. F. D route above the minimum average required for daily mail service. It is tlie great news purveyor of tho whole Southland, as good in the gulf scales as on the Atlantic seaboard. Clubbed with The Atlanta Constitution, we have the superb FREE OFFERS shown from which you may make yar.r choice of cue: (1) uncle j&omus’s Home Magazine—Founded by Joel Chandler Harris, the prince of all story writ ers, author of Uncle Remus folk-lore and other sket lies. It is the nn.axiac of the whole Southland, it is as broad as the nation in its scope and its succ is confined to no section. (i!) Human Infe, of Boston, Mass., a monthly magazine of current and interesting biography. It is about folks. p< epic in tho public eye now, that you want to know about, and it is of absorbing interest from cover to cover. Be sure to subscribe now in lime to got the next great issue. (-i) Talks From Fanners to Farmers, a symposium of Southern farm knowledge that should be in the hands of ev on practical farmer, young or old. The articles have all appeared in Tri-Weekly Con stitution under same t’tle and made cne ©f tlie greatest features of this splendid farmers’ paper. It will be mailed to you immediately upon receipt of order. (4) The Southern Finalist, cue of the best agricultural papers in the south. It is a semi-monthly edited by a farmer on his own farm, and is intensely practical and helpful. Og? GwtZil Proposition Remember, our paper one year, and THE TRI-WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, three times a week, for one year, and your selection of one from the four alternate free otTers, all for $1.75; or the whole combination (ex cept that The Weekly Constitution is substituted for the Tri-Weekly) for 0n1y..51.40 Send at once. Get right on. Don’t miss a copy. Address all orders for above : ‘'“" nn ‘° THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY, McDonough, Ga. of her sister Mrs. Sallie Tidwell. Mr and Mrs. J. W. Foster and little daughter, Mamye Gem, visi ted Mr. and Mrs, Gas Mit«hell near Liberty Hill one day last week. Mr. W, J. Ow*ms, of Atlanta , spent the past week here with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Strickland visited Mr. and Mrs .T. F. Johnson a while Sunday evening. Mrs. Sallie Tidwell and grand daughter Miss Maud Tidvrell of Dntchtown are visiting relatives here this week. Mr. L. P. Johnson of Atlanta spent Saturday night and Sunday here with his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Johnson and family. Mrs. J. W. Foster and daughter, 1 Miss Mattie Lee, was the delight ful guest of Mrs. Lona Berry Sun day afternoon. Mrs. George Conkle and Mis. James Stephenson visited relatives near here day last week. Mr. Garie Strickland spent last night [Monday) with Mr. T. R. Tidwell and family Mr. Herslial Mays and family spent Monday night here with relatives. Misses Mattie Lee and Estelle Foster were the guest of Miss Annie Pearl Strickland awhile Friday afternoon. II LOOKMfI O!? IAT THIS PRICE V K M I IS buys a SSrlcSly CkMM?, ! SEEING [machine Mifes !fi Apcl has alt tha u»-40-#*t» inrprovamants that 3 e»»ry l*dr It i* s»l»Bdidly liyilt E fievxwidublo inaWrlaj auol h»nfi*c>i»ieljr » ,] finished. 11a* elegant Oak Drop Leaf 5-Drawer CeV Ha liK't. cv>«clcta of AttaeUmenta. full tlonahow t» uso »l»m,'aud tUo outfit will bo sent! || you "Freight Free” on fl S®cnsarja*«i£<'m'-tt.ii!R!-c.-m«K3?r o iins»3BKy3iW!ex3»fy r: i jjjS>o a/f TaM AL xr* Mil DlKE('Te,t«>!£ j* FrtvriT. sovinu' res S* WHssEvjoj Jobbor’s, Rotiiilor’* a*< 1 IF**-. r Wr' AttrMt'g profita and rrll ,N iH!r oxix'nwa. <t"xaotiy E jj a 'l'liftflTiHiWw. i : > tb» !•!«* niurlitn* tUay 1 3js>l Will a»k you 6:*U.UO for. -*y, *»iwl »* OKCIC far OL Jt » ''r* v Bin mew mis I r\ si ’ SEWING MACHINS 1 ml ' CATALOGUE xfirj j Moat com pleto anti R, ftraatira baok of lia 9 A ahamotar evw pab!ictt e J 'KUtwaun. j. U. tk<* #-)«Mi. It »A*t- VMrgTT-rcwniEL-rj’-T ur*.n\r< dtsci*i Sx'fi avery part aiid of Qg ilio lina of poaCttTely Hifli-Cvuclo Skiving: flj® Mtacmines ever (kftrrd. YTc arp* the lari;' at Hawing fey tlnmint s iji • Xccitfi. and. ai |irices yd y.sk*4 for fuatifp guonnitnd. our Machine* aro un ftic «*atchaJp>lw. This « awd piieea |1 kig'-h-rrad* i v ianos. OTunn-b Manges, ('ookiug Hg Stovtf*. R!•#»»*§• Stoves. Ph*nofrraMh*< Dirninr a rm H S Toilet Sets. Tronjiil sii pments. safe delivery and ft S satiafact* n guanciteed, or your money back. || MAIA>*Y, SESPP & CO., fl Bwfc V «S. fcf4.»,i. ATLAKTA, tßi: 6l\ How Do You Feed Your Crops? DO YOU KNOW just what your cotton and corn need, and are you furnishing it in such quantities as required and in sueh shape that the plant can use it ? Suppose you should put the food for your stock in a box, nail it up and place it in their trough —would you ex pect them to thrive and grow r fat ? Hardly! Well, did it ever occur to you you use lumpy, badly mixed fertilizers you are putting' this same proposi tion up to your crops —offering -y— plant food in such, shape that they can’t get to it ? Fertilizers, to do your crops any good, must dissolve in the soil waters. These are constantly in motion, rising to the surface during the day and s isfwp'g a 1 night —passing and repassing the roots of the plant, which absorb the food contained in the water —and this is the only way in which the plant can feed. Therefore, when you buy fertilizer, you should do so with the idea of furnishing' food for your crop and on the same principle that you should ft**has f< *1 for your stock. It should not only contain At necessary Ammonia, Phosphoric Acid and Potash, but all e? 4® tls/ssa should be in solubla form —tjae mechanical condition of the fertilizer should be such ns to permit the (riant to absorb every particle of it, and the stood*, should be manu factured from materials that vr*ll give up their plant food at one time, but furnish a stcaiy supply throughout the entire growing season. A This is the fertilizer von sboiski have end cun in only one way. It is impossible to produce a goods like this by the dry-mixing of raw materials, whether you do this at home with a shovel and a screen or buy it from someone who has made it the same vruy —the only difier oiice being in the quantity. These materials must be ground to a powder, and it re quires machinery costing thousands of dollars to do it properly. They must then be so manipulated that '. hen complete, you have a compoiziu’-'j each ounce of which is exactly like every other-ounce, and not a iru.xtv.re, one part of which would contain too much Ammonia and too little Potash, while another part would be exactly the opposite —and all of it contain plant food lockad up and not available. Remember that the chemical analysis of a fertilizer is no test of its crop growlr ; quad: k. . " . : :hl can pul verize lumps end by ii:e u-_- of carious means search out the plant foci; yen:: era;? cank. You can take an axe, break open the box and get the corn ; your mule nar/d, % Don’t risk a crop failure ! Insure your peace of mind as well as your crop by using Arissoiir M s Animal Ammoniated Fertilizers Manufactured by Armour Fertilizer Works ATLANTA. GEORGIA OAKLAND, Mr. Malone Fields accompanied by Miss Annie Adams, were wel come visitors at Oakland Sunday School Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Barnett visit ed the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J P. McCullough, Sunday. Clad to learn that Mr. Joe Green Mitchell is some better at this writing. Mr. and Mrs. Drue Carmichael were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Will Fargason Sunday. The rainy weather still contin ues. Mrs. D. T. Stone is on the sick list this week. The pound supper given by Mr. and Mrs. Linie Barnett Saturday night was enjoyed by all present. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Moss were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Mar tin Saturday night. Messrs Perry Welch and Homer Patterson spent last Wednesday night with Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Barnett.