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About The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1914)
The U. S. Senatorship < FOR AND AGAINST JOHN M. SLATON does not stand for Everything and anything, just to catch votes. Things that sound good, but which are unobtain able. False measures that may look good on the surface hut are dangerous at bottom. The demands of those who are impatient to have the world made perfect in a day. Impracticable proposals, no matter how well-in tentioned. The making of promises which he knows he cannot keep. Getting into office by false means in the hope that the people will forget. EXAMINE THE RECORD. JOHN !VT. SLATON does stand far The fundamental principles of Democracy. Progressive methods as against impracticable radi calism. The oppressed, and against the oppressor. Conservatism that makes result producing pro gress. The supremacy of the white race and adequate means for its protection. Economy in government expenditures. An equitable distribution of taxation, placing the burdens on those most able to bear them, and who enjoy most the benefits of Government. He thinks the government should assist agricul ture, the source of all wealth, as much as pos sible. He will fight for a rural credit system. JOHN M. SLATON stands for the practicable, the obtainable, the sensible, the logical, the sane, and the progressive in government. John M. Slaton Slate Campaign Committee ALFRED C. NEWELL, Chairman J. A. MORROW, Secretary “SEND SLATON TO THE SENATE ” 34. SLATON, a* prcuidewt of the Stale Senate, east the de ciding vote for the income tax amendment. SLATON brought about the pasnage of Georgia's inheritance tax law. SLATON reduced the expenditures of the State of Georgia the first time in forty years. SLATON staked his political Jifr on saving the State from disgrace of repudiation and t«ardl it. % B. & F. A. MITCHAM, Euniture and Undertaking HAH^TON/GEORGIA. W e have an experiem d Embalmer, a Henry county boy lf.r. Perry Welch. 4L& valla ansvrerwi promptlj 4ay or 4kJt«mb*lmlng caiatnlly don® and a< lln t t, best methods Onf stock of metal and w ood oasket * ere nneqnallsd C ini services, hearsed and eqnipmer 0t) s best to be had. We furnish the best teel, brisk or > nt Vaults. IKr.and Mrs. Oscar Mays and family East Point a ,e the jpßß&fcs of pf Mr. G. W. Hand, fflsi ERcVmond Fk raing, of Wax- is the guest of his randvi.'Mr. iHenryAmis Rte. H. ;L. Carmichael scent Wed nesday with Miss Ella F ry *rr thti Sixth', district. Miss Berry iseturmed with her and remained till Umrsdaj. Advertisement. !, 'ih Hutto: cam hern Sav 1 Tuesday to spen e sur her lovely home / e. Her Vers. Mrs. D.Rober.-on, of ’ \nd Mrs. Me: ae a, of F h. preceded her v, a few rie Lucy Hailey nt the id here with the ’ ie foil i s recently retu and fror ■■'•v n spent at Mu. ehy and r -vs, N. C. The Southern Mortgage Company « Capital and Surplus, s£oo,ooo. Established 1870. Gould Building—lo Decatur Street— 9 Edgew'ood Avenue. FARM LOANS Negotiated throughout the State on Improved Farm Lands in sums ot SI,OOO to SIOO,OOO on Five Years’ time at reasonable rates. Our sources of money are practically inexhaustible. We nave a strong . line of customers among individual investors and Savings Banks and Trust Companies in the North, East and Middle West, and we number among our customers the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. with assets of more than a hundred million dollars. J. T. Holleman, President W. A. Thompson, Abstracts of Title W, L. Kemp, Vice-President R. H. Osborn, Abstracts of Title J. W. Andrews, Secretary L. A. Boulighn}, Auditor E. R. Hunt, Treasurer S. R. Cook, Secretary’s Clerk E. V. Carter, Attorney T. B. Dempsey, Abstract Clerk A, d’Antignac, Inspector C. W. Felker, Jr., Abstract Clerk. W. A. Howell, Abstracts of Title Horace Holleman, Application Clerk. For information, call on or write to BROWN &. BROWN, McDonough, Georgia. Why I Prefer Aberdeen-Angus Cattle to Other Breeds. / V 1 They are black, and uniform in both color and shape. 2 They are hornless, grades as well as purebreds. 3 They are built close to the ground, and have smooth, blocky, compact bodies. 4 They are kind, gentle, quiet and easily handled. 5 They fatten well on grass, and lay on flesh smoothly and in the right place. 6 They net more beef to the gross weight than any other breeds. 7 They eat less in the stall to produce the same weight. 8 They are easily fatted at any age. 9 They are a hardy and prolific breed, and develop rapidly while young. Produce the finest of the famous ‘'Baby Beef”. 10 The bulls are prepotent breeders, transmitting their desirable characteristics to their offspring —even fron common cows. Though the Angus are pre eminently beef cattle, they will standcomparison with any pure breed recognized as a milk producing breed. Their milk is exceeding rich. So long with their superiority in beef probuction, their dairy qualities are not as latent as often as imagined. The cross of an Angus bull on a dairy type of cow gives an excellent dual purpose cattle. Never in the history of cattle breeding has a breed won so many honors and made such rapid strides as the Aberdeen-Angus, They have swept nearly ev erything where ever the breeds have competed at the fat stock shows the world over, and have done so for years. They are market toppers. They have demon strated conclusively everywhere they have been tried, that as a breed, they are superior to all others for crossing and grading up purposes. I am offering the services of a pure-bred Angus bull as cheap as is consistent with his good breeding and individuality. J. 0. RUTHERFORD, Hampton, Ga.