The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, December 21, 1917, Image 2
The Henry County Weekly Hv J.*A. & A. L. FOUCHB. Entered at tin* postofftce at McDon oujfh,-Qfi , .»s *t*ooTU» iniiil ii Htter. Advertising Hates )?<• pt-r inch, p<>si sltion ncaddition!)] —special contracts Official Orjfan of Henry County. McDonough, On., Dec. 21, 1917. Christmas D ty next Tuesday. Ever see as cold a December? Hope the worst of winter is now over. • * Waiting and watching for that subscription. Here’s hoping also that Mr. B. Weevil was completely frozen out. If freezes mellow' the ground farming should be a round of de light next year. An exchange boasts of being all strictly original. Yes, a lot of pa pers are too painfully original. We bet Hell will some place with all the war speculators and K user Bill. —Greensboro Herald- Journal. The gent who refers to his wife as ‘‘sugar” will not be in a pre dicament as to the scarcity of su gar, says an exchange. Our advice to the Senoia man who wants his coal to go a long way is to leave it out at night, says the Enterprise-Gazette. The Duke of the Griffin News may smoke Camel cigaretts, but he has no hump on his back. His bright editorial page gets brighter all the time. Thirteen wag*the sacred “num ber of the Mexicans and the an cient people of Yucatan. Their week had thirteen days and they had thirteen snake gods. The Thomasville Times-Enter prise observes that “guns and booze behind the tragedy are fast disappearing, but the fool at the steering wheel is rapidly taking their place.” Where did the Senoia Enter prise Gazette get that hyphenated name, brother Nolan ? Surely, surely there hasn’t been two pa pers in a town like Senoia at the same time. Aftef remaining in possession of the Moslems for more than a thousand years Jerusalem has fallen into the hands of the Brit ish, and the civilized world re joices that it goes under Christian rule. * • One thing that puzzles us is, why, if Billy Sunday wants to spread the gospel, he tacks “copy right” on the tail-end of all his sermons. We fear Billy has been bitten by the big business bug.— Savannah Press. At Jeast he is rot following Christ in this one respect. . m I Rushing Cars. Fifteen hundred flat cars have been mshed to lines operating in the .Southeastern part of the coun try in order to facilitate tli2 trans port uof the piling and heavy lumber needed for the new ship building yards. The Commission on Car Seryice of the Railroads’ War Board his a iso ordered the prompt move ment of more than 3,0U0 box cars Into the West and Middle West to protect Government orders of grain and hay. In addition, a large consignment of refrigerator has been sent into Colorado, Idaho, North Dakota and Minnesota to handle the apple and potato crops. The potato growers in Colorado increased their production this year without making any provis }on for the storage of the extra crop. As a result, the demand fo refrigerator cars there has been unusually heavy. To safeguard the movement of all perishable ciops, the Commis sion on Car Service has issued a general order to the railroads, in structing them to exercise the strictest economy in the handling of refrigerator cars, the supply of which is unequal to the demand. The order states that cars sh ill not only be moved with dispatch and unloaded promptly, but that all refrigerator cars must be re turned at once to the owning road after they have been unloaded. It also urged more co-operation on the part of the shippers to load cars to full capacity instead of wasting car efficiency through continued shipment of minimum car loads. The Commission of Car Service has supplemented this order with th ■ suggestion that the railroads save refrigerator cars by making a more liberal use of box cars in moving potatoes. These box cars, the Commissioner states, will*be suitable for the movement of po tatoes if .they are substantially lined and provided with stove pro tection. Georgia Fund Is Up to Wise. Washington, Dec. 14. —Secreta- ry Houston and Solicitor Williams-, ot the Department of Agriculture, told Hugh M. Dorsey today they would pay the $30,000 due the Georgia Experimental Station as Goversment funds, if Congress would pass a resolution providing that the trustees of the State Ag ricultural Station be permitted to receive the funds. Governor Dorsey today prepar ed the resolution and will ask Representative Wise, of the Sixth District, in which the institution at Griffin is located to introduce it. Thus far, Mr. Wise has not agreed to introduce the resolution and push it to passage because people in Griffin are apprehensive that this may be a step toward consol idating the State Experiment Sta tion with the State Agricultural College at Athens. For twenty years the Govern ment has been paying, the $30,000 annually to the State Experiment Station, but this year Mr. Williams held that the money could not be paid to the trustees of experimen tal station, and must be turned over to the trustees of some insti tution that was created and ope rated under the Morrill act, which inculdes the Georgia Agricultural College. Opportunities which have pass ed seldom come back to the man who waits. An adage that cuts all round must be a circular saw. Marriage. Marriage has in it less beauty, but more safety than single life; it has not more ease but less danger, it is more merry and more sad, it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys; it lies under more burdens, it is supported by all the strength of love and charity, and those burdens are delightful. Marriage is the mother of the world, and preserves kingdoms, and fills cities and churches and heaven itself. Celibacy, like the fiy in tne heart of an apple, dwells in perpetual sweetness, but sits alone, and is confined and dies in singulraifcy; but marriage, like the useful bee, builds a house and gathers sweet ness from every flower, and la bors and unites into societies and republics and sends out colonies; and feeds-the world with delica cies, and obeys their king, and keeps order, and exercises many virtues, and promotes the interest of mankind, and is that state of good to which God hath designed the present constitution of the world. Good to Have in the House. Coughs, colds, croup and la grippe are prevalent, Colds promptly checked mean saving of time, money and health. Pneu monia and other serious illness may follow a neglected cold. T. R. Lynch, 100 Spring Av., Dußols, Pa., writes: “For many years we have kept Foley’s Honey and Tar in the house and it has saved many doctors’ bills. It is fine for colds.” A child’s health is too precious to risk giving imitations or substitutes; insist on Foley’s. The McDonough Drug Co. Over $300.00 in Cash Prizes and Scholarships to be Given Away by * ZS/tJ/neM Zo/Zs/e You can win a prize if you start right away. This is your opportunity to win a Scholarship in Georgia s Leading Training School. Special Reduced Christmas Rates You can save from SIO.OO to $20.00 on a Life Scholarship if you will take advantage of our. Special Reduced Christmas R ites of tuT tion. You can buy now and enter any time it suits you. But we need you in our school now to prepare for a good position in the business world. We cannot supply the demand for our graduates. Learn Shorthand in Three Months. You can master our simplified system of shorthand in three months hundreds have learned it in two months, and we know no reason why you should not do as well. If you will investigate you will be convinced that this is the college for you. We help our stu dents, not only while they are here in school, but any time after they leave. FILL OUT AND RETURN Bagwell Business College, 34% Luckie St., Department H. C. W. M., Atlanta, Ga. Gentiemen : Please send me particulars of your contest, also give me your Christmas rates. I am interested in the following couises : Shorthand, Bookkeeping, Penmanship, Typewriting. (Please undeiscoreithefcourses in which you are interested) Name Address Date Would you mix your cattle-feed with cotton? YOU know that such a combination would be carried through the digestive tract without giving the milk producing and fat-producing food a chance to be assimilated. The lint on old style hulls acts the same way. It forms a pad or cushion-like covering around the concentrates that prevents the digestive juices from extracting the full amount of protein. *RAD| MARK RIJCKEYF V HULLS V LINTLESS contain no lint to clog or flux the digestive tract. They are digested and they allow the other forage to be di gested the same as hay or any other roughage. When you mix your feed with Buckeye Hulls you know that you are using rougl age that will help—not hinder — the meal, corn, oats, or whatever concentrate you prefer. Other Advantages 2000 pounds of real roughage to No trash or dust. the ton —not 1500. Easy to handle because sacked. Cost much less per ton. They mix well with other forage. Go much farther." They take less space in the barn. Mr. C. K. Henderson, Aiken, S. C., says: that he would rather have Buckeye Hulls than any others. He uses Buckeye Hulls altogether says they are cheaper and better. To secure the best results and to develop the ensilage odor, wet the halls thoroughly twelve hours before feeding. It is easy to do this by wetting them down night and morning (or the next feeding. If at any time this cannot be done, wet down at least thirty minutes. If you prefer to feed the hulls dry, use only half as much by bulk as of old style hulls. Book of Mixed Feeds Free Gives the right formula for every combination of feeds used in the South. Tells how much to feed for maintenance, for milk, for fat tening, for work. Describes Buckeye Hulls and gives directions for using them properly. Send for your copy to the nearest mill. Dept, k The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. De P t. k Atlanta Birmingham Greenwood Little Rock Memphis Augusta Charlotte Jackson Macon Selma