The Danielsville monitor. (Danielsville, Madison County, Ga.) 1882-2005, January 30, 1925, Image 2

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This Week) Bv Arth’Jf Brisbane A WHITEHOLbL BREAKFAST. HEALTY AND WISE. AMERICA ON WHEELS. THE VEGETABLE FIGHT. S=r- E. 11. Gary, head of the big gest industrial organization in ho world, and John I*. Rockeftiu 1 , Jr., representing what is probably at ill the biggest fortune in tho ■world, had breakfast with Presi dent Cool it! go at the White Hot; o. They du ussed law enforeentent and the findings of a citizens’ com mittee of one thousand. Those three men make an in terest it. g breakfast combination. Gary became hea 1 of the gi> at steel concern when h was past fifty; Rockefeller, Jr., bom to cvn and’ manage the world’s greatest fortune, is r< moved by only one generation fn in a little farm in the hills al'itg the li dson, and Calvin Cool in o; , iteration is promoted lmm a fn “> in Ver mont to tho White House. Apparently, ‘'careens are st. 1 open to talent, ns Napoleon put it, here in America. A curiosity interesting to women is thus announced, ‘‘Twins Horn in Different Years.” One. Thom as Daniel, was horn in 1924, his brother, James, was born in L'2s, two hours and fifty-five minutes after Ins older brother. There is anew plnn for teach ing little boys how to grow up. This is the ' ’Knighthood” plan, to tench little boys chivalry and guide them away from evil. It’s a good plan, presumably, but it is possible to overdo schemes and plans for showing boys how to art and think. They need some time in which to think exactly in their own way. It is the thinking that a boy does on his own account nnd of his own free will that counts. Little NewtonVoalled a dull boy, was thinking out the law • f gravi tation. Na' dt,>n, called a sulky boy at his io' ! •or • !• > !, w-s making 1 • ■ • 1 ■ ’■* teacncrs lr.-r. T ot children alone, at least ; .;i t c: the Sugar c ,nr. vs, oil and rail road i .in. - are organ . ;t;g greet meigc.;, bigger at ! bigger industrial ii- t a.v com.ng. In the end, j . • im:.s wilt include ii lu :dea. No need tv w-ry nbeu it. The bigger the be.’.t, if the public gets its share of the s\ •>. If the pu. lie is not inU!i;jrenl ough to watch and regulate one big con cern, it won't be able to watch a; 1 control the secret inside deals of a dozen little concerns. Very expensive is the overhead in w flSv v ful competition, and the public pays the entire bill always. Inez Hardin, the Mississippi girl chosen as the healthiest in the country, is described r.s a bundle of sunshine. Health and sunshine go together. The young gill is a bundle of Common sense also, anil says “I’ll marry when I’m thirty. Not un til then." Some healthy boy may change her mind, but she would be wise to stick to her plan. Healthy mothers have their best babies after thrity. and in fact after thirt\ ■five. *■ Plato knew it, more than 2,000 years ago. We know that America rules the world in automobile use and pro duction. having more automobiles titan all the rest of the world combined, with millions of ma chines to spar*. How much do we ride? This country in 1924 manufac tured 45 nvllion. tires. AH wv g an avenge iv. ~cc of 0.000 nii.es, which is \ni. ; di\ c yf. ..r! you find that tirs trough were made in one year for more tl- .n sixty-seven nnd a half bill.on miles travel--twenty-seven hmi drv vi thv.tsand times around tho earth. One sclent ~s 0 ’ ers that the \ .w dc v to to bao.o unato V to both of W ' ' ; x ~i Th tap f i .v vrd; iry rot'" > plant Will V'oiy i- :. ,i x . , ~ , i > top of i >. ibe v v down to the . .do t •; i , • V ... ;U ,' tuig. ' -V- ’.***■ a now ■ - . . i ■•<’,! |vg..o i ] t 1 D ■ ■ > , -** •tutM- -a tp. tat* s c’-.... v ■.'■ ■'; But n • .. :. i . :.*vV i sous t in •. Ihe intevee '■ c ■ - 1-* H>c pnvf that in . * w. ft- ft -i,., to cal; •: . . . i • TIME TO auil TRADING DOLLARS HASTINGS DECLARES TH AT PRES ENT SOUTHERN FARM SYSTEM GETS US NOWHERE Atlanta. Ga (Spec al.l—' ’’lt's time i for every Southern farmer who clings j 1 to tb- all or n* arly all. cotton idea to | dg a lot cf straight thinking before ho pitches his 1925 crop. Most of our i cotton farmers are trading dollars and losing at that three years out of four.” said H. G. Hastings, leading agricultural authority r.rd Chairman of the Farm and Marketing Bureau of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. "For tho past two years Providence has stepped in and saved us from the j results of our own folly. In 1923 we j planted thirty - nine million acres of j cotton; In 1924 forty million acres.; In each of these years there was acre- | age enough to hove made, with even j fair season conditions, sixteen to eigh- j teen million bales and a ten-cent price ! or less with tho inevitable farm smash j ! that such price would bring.” Provi- i j donee cannot bed pended on indofi-; j nltely to bring unfavorable seasons j 1 and cut down yield per acre. Wo, j stepped lip a couple of million bales | in and. by so doing, the South I has lost about three hundred million dollars that have come right out of tho farm pocket. "In spite of these danger signals flying in evt ry cotton state, plans are being mad everywhere to in cr* ase cotton acreage ‘n 1025. This I can only be done at the expense { of cutting down food and grain acres ' at a time when food and grain is high and going higher every week. “1 am no alarmist, but the present tendency, the intent to plant the whole face of the earth in cotton this spring that is so evident gives me grave con cern. If the boll weevil or drought don't cut the 1925 crop, starvation low prices will get the cotton grower. The situation looks just as hazardous to me as In 1920. unless the craze for in creased cotton acreage can be headed off somehow. Growing cotton and buying bread meat and grain is simply trading dol lars, or worse. It never is profitable. Most years it's a lc*ing game. There is only one way to safeguard 1925 Flan for and plant enough food, grain and forage acres to insure your family nnd live stock full food supply with out buying from store or feed dealer. In this don’t forget that a good big home garden is a wonderful food source. With food and live stock mply provided for, a good living ii -ured, regardless of cotton prices.’ Hall’s Catarrh Medicine Those who an- in a “run-down" condi tion will not’ce that Ratarrh bothers them much more than when they are >r eood health This fact proves that whiie Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly influenced bv constitutional conditions. Hll I Si ITUIRII MKCK l\E is a Combined Treatment, b th local and in ternal. and has been successful in the treatment of tarrh fc- over forty veers. Fold by all druggists. F. J Cher.ey A Cos . TMedo. Ohio. Change of Life "When change of life began on me,” says Mrs. Lewis Lisher, of Lamar, Mo., "I suffered so with womanly weakness. I suffered a great deal of pain in my back and sides. My limbs would cramp. I didn't feel like doing my work, and there are so many steps for a woman to take on a farm. I was very anxious to get better. A friend rec ommended K SRt 51 *1 ki H SjßsSiia %■* StIS Si {>> i HIC vf Ul'ioil w I Uiilks to 1“-' 1 I t'oe—n r i-ir i f I certainly i-L.- l'v *,.t' At'’ 1 ins t i c' , - ■ c-us-n-lt n .tt. . > i iv ■.vi THfc. UAMthSVII.It MJhIOK, UANIKLSL LLE, Ci-Ju SEW UP THE HOLES IN FARM POCKETS NO FARMER CAN REGULARLY BUY FOOD AND GRAiN AND PROSPER Atlanta, Ga.—(Special.)—''For fifty tears or more the generality cf our cotton-growing tanners have been regularly going around with holes in their pockets, so to speak, through which dropped any and all profits that could and should have come from their farm operations." "If the South is to ever reach any reasonable degree of farm prosperity, those holes must be sewed up." said H. G. Hastings, leading agricultural authority and chairman of the Farm and Marketing Bureau of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. "1 have been in practically ev ry state in our own country, as well as many foreign countries. I have yet to see any state or section where food and grain buying by farmers was the regu lar practice that did not show rela tive poverty on the part of those farmers. On the other hand. I have never been in any state or section where food and grain was grown suf ficient at least for home needs whero farm prosperity did not show. “If he would, the Southern farmer could be the richest farmer in the United Utates instead of the poorest, which he is. The reason he isn t prosperous is because h: p mists in following a farm system that has proved a failure the world over re gardless of the particular crop grown. "The South's dependence on cotton and the regular purchase of food nnd grain from other sections U the real cause ot the Southern farmer's lack of prosperity. And things are not go ing to get right with our farmers until they quit having their smoke houses In Chicago or Omaha and their corn cribs in lowa or Kansas. "The 1925 cotton crop is going to be one of the most expensive to make we have ever seen. Food, grain, labor and fertilizer are all high. Every pound of food or grain needed by farm family or working live stock should be produced on home acres, and that production started in gar- I den and in field just as early as sea son conditions will permit. Home pro i duction of every pound of food, grain i and forage needed for home consump tion on the farm in .1923 will stop up ; the holes in the South's farm pocket, i and it's the only way to ?top them up." c L O S E D CARS ftaBQHBEJKSS*. - '"*' r ~ ~*>A T’Vii''?! *~W3B j iiis felgjo - st f al a 3s iti q car fes* tfi? fasnlly T he Fordor Sedan provides reem for the whole family. Yet it is a light, easily handled car-the kind you want for the months of changeable weather and difficult driving conditions. It is fitted. with carpet mid curtains that harmonize with the cc-lor tones of trie two wide, ueep:j uphoistere*.! so ts. It enables vou to ke-'” 1 " T ”*orfab , v warm, yet have plenty of f.-oshair since the Fordor Sea-V - - ‘ vithCowl ——j \’endktor ar.dw indowsthatiowVrbymiWgriiulatcrs. j ir.oi ordoroeuan y r _ . I irrN c\\ i a Cur tnat cucrs you I'c-tter value or £1 £ lucre widelv u f u l sen ice. Ari tl-e c-- wn r~v V Odi ? an d S kn I: h; St cu;;.iJc ; hLoS, ml j" L S w Cyt&T* XD^y2Tt/IC&T"U Detroic ' '<S^ j a *L . Vr.-t. iM SEE THE HEASIEST ' v p ' *, T \ : T''^>T'TA.X"rc Howto Make Money! paint facts Illustration describes how to make BEST—PURE—PaiNT F ° r $ 2 - 82 ® Ga|| ° n Slip L& M SEMI-PASTE PAINT (l It KGALS tk is White Lead and Costly White zinc to assure longest years of They are 'imply adding Linseed Wear, aS piOVen by 50 years Of oil to l& m semi-paste Paint u^mos t satisfactory use. Quickly done. SavesyouMoney WMUW " J least cos T-because in Semi-Paste form, and therefore °o f £ 80 GUARANTEE - Use a gallon out of any you buy, and if not per. fectly sat .factory the remainder can be returned Without paymeni being made for the one gallon used. f FOR SALE BT GHOLSTON BROS. children v_rv Tor- " M pI OTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute foil Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teeth* fj/i/'! L- —— l —JJpV ing Drops and Soothing I '—7J ‘T’’ l M Syrups, prepared for Infanti ! ( \ l p* \ an<^: Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it