The Lyons progress. (Lyons, Ga.) 19??-1991, November 09, 1922, Image 6

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I VALV IZ -1M •H£ AD / YaJ § f T ? 6 [ y£ ' r ' Ijlff | (PJ {{V* a/ Comparison Both are Buick Ow« has Four Cylinders —the other has Six • * The Buick nameplate on the radiator of a car is the mark of merit. Whether the car has four cylinders or six is of secondary importance. The vital fact is that it’s a Buick. The new Buick Four is the ideal automobile for the motorist requiring a light economical car, yet having all the speed, power and sturdiness of larger and costlier cars. Tbs Buick Six, perfectly appointed, with all the fiexi ef and smoothness of the six cylinder car at its , has earned its position among motor cars as the Standard of Comparison. Choosing between the Four and the Six is simply a matter of size and price. Both are Buick. C-15-49 Meadows Buick Company Vidalia, Georgia WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM ▼XT f* *4* T 'l* " T '4' w*TT *■ ♦ ♦ v * ♦ 4 ♦ ♦ • ' * • ► f * 4 \ Footwear j ► 4 Moderately Priced ► « t 4 4 • 4 ' We are ofiereing tlie newest it Footwear for men, . * 4 » i ► women and children at prices you will find highly agree > < able. Not for some time have we been able to offer fine * * « * quality Footwear at such moderate prices.. .Come in and ’ ► look at our selection.. The values will surprise you. J l 4 \ A. L. PAGE | : < * 4 ; General*Merchandise Lyons, Ga. : ► 4 > 4 * 4 4 * ’+++.Hli t I»******4S-+**4H-***+***4-4-**4-*4»*»»»»»4»M-l».t.4 | Your Friend In The Bank ! o A friend is defined as “one who cherishes kind regard • *» for another.” * * ► Is there some one in your bank who smiles at you and ! \ \ calls you by name when you go in ? \ ' I Some one who greets you with a mental handshake at ! , | each meeting, and when you depart you feel a friendly pat |j J; on the back without the physical contact. \ [ Some one who takes an interest in you and makes you * « * feel that if you ever need to confide in somebody upon per- i ’ sonal or business matters you can find help right there? ! We want this bank of ours to radiate an atmosphere of ’ * | individual, friendly interest and sincerity, for we make con- * y, stant effort to have the TOOMBS COUNTY BANK a bank * y to which people like to come. < This bank is a good friend to thousands of loyal, satisfied ; customers. ! r .j ; 1 TOOMBS COUNTY BANK :: CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - - . $37,000.00 - LYONS, GEORGIA I OFFICERS: f VY A. McNATT, President. R. L. PAGE, Vice-Pres. I W. T. CHINA, Cashier. 4 4 T be Quinine That Does Not AHect The Heed F. (-euse of its tonic end laxative effect, LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets) can be taken b: anyone without causing nervousness or ringing k. 'he heed. E.W.GROVE'S signature cn box. 20c. Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only one Bromo Quinine." '• E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. SOc- THE LYONS PROGRESS, LYONS, GEORGIA BEST PLAN TO RAISE CALVES Minnesota Idea Is to Give Youngsters Good Start and Then F«pd Hay and Grain. The milk of 45 out of every 100 cows kept in the United States is sold as whole milk. Owners of the herds where milk is marketed in this way have a serious problem in raising the necessary number of calves to main tain their herds. If no calves are raised and the farmer depends upon buying what he needs there is con stant danger of disease and his herd seldom improves from year to year. When raising calves under these con ditions some milk must be used, as there Is no substitute for it. Experiments in progress at the Min nesota experiment station show that the best plan so far worked out Is to give the calves a good start with milk and then get them on grain and hay aa soon as possible. The plan sug gested Is to feed milk in the usual way to the age of about fifty then if the calf Is strong and vigor ous gradually reduce the amount un til none is fed after the calf Is sixty to sixty-five days old. Alfalfa or clover hay and a grain mixture of com meal four parts, bran one part and oilmeal one part Is kept before the calves. They will begin eating grain and hay when about a month old and will gradually Increase the amount until at the time the milk feeding ceases at sixty to sixty-five days of age they are able to get along very nicely without milk. Calves handled in this manner will be somewhat checked in growth for a short time after the milk is taken from the ration, but will be in as good condition as the calf raised on skim JaL. jj.y. Teaching a Calf to Drink SKim Milk. milk by the time they are six months of age. The total milk used need not exceed 400 pounds. The grain mix ture mentioned serves the purpose just as well as more expensive com mercial calf meals. —C. EL Eckles, chief of the dairy division. University of Minnesota. MISSOURI DAIRY COW FEEDS Recommended That Animal Be Fed All Alfalfa or Clover Hay Bhe Will Consume. In making up a ration for dairy cows the Missouri College of Agricul ture recommends that cows be fed all the alfalfa or clover hay they will readily consume, and to feed com silage when available. To this should be added a grain mix ture if good results are to follow. A grain mixture often recommended Is four parts, by we’ght, of com chops, two parts wheat bran and one part either cottonseed or linseed meal. This mixture is to be fed according to the quantity of milk produced. One pound of the mixture is suffi cient for every four pounds of milk produced by a Holstein cow or for every three pounds produced by a Jer sey. It is not a bad plan, in the above ra tion, to mix the cottonseed and linseed meal half and half, instead of using one alone. LET CALVES RUN ON PASTURE Aa Grass Contains Large Amount of Water, Something Additional Muat Be Given. Calves dropped In the fall and early winter should be allowed to run on pasture during the summer, Pas ture, however, should not be depend ed upon altogether, as It contains too large an amount of water In propor tion to the food nutrients to Insure the calves a satisfactory ration. Feeding Cows Properly. Feeding cows so they can exist Is I one thing, and feeding them so they can produce milk is still another. Freshen Cowe in Fall. The farmers who make It a point to freshen their cows in the fall of the year know how to make money. Unsatisfactory Methods. Primitive methods of dairying will not brinj satisfactory results under Sunday School ' Lesson' (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Taacher of English Bible In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright. 18J2. Weetern Newtpeper Union LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 12 JESUS THE GREAT TEACHER LESSON TEXT—Luke 6:20-49. GOLDEN TEXT—As ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.—Luke 6:31. REFERENCE MATERIAL—Matt. 6:1- M; John 3:2; 6:68; 7:46; Col. 2:3. PRIMARY TOPlC—Jesus Teaching us to Love Everybody. JUNIOR TOPlC—Living by the Golden Rule. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —The Golden Rule In Everyday Life. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Je§M» Teaching Us How to Live To gether. I. Characteristics of the Subjects of the Kingdom (vv. 20-26). Only those who are subjects of the Kingdom know what blessedness is. The spiritual experience of the sub jects of the Kingdom are marked by the following steps: 1. Poverty of Spirit (v. 20). This means consciousness of one’s lost con dition and worthlessness. It is spir itual bankruptcy. It means to come to the end of self and to show sorrow for sins. 2. Hunger for Righteousness (v. 21). The one who has come to know his poverty desires the true righteousness of Christ. 3. Weeping Because of His Lack (v. 21). This Is the godly sorrow which worketh repentance (II Cor. 7:10). Those who thus sorrow are assured that they shall laugh. 4. Treatment Which the Subjects of the Kingdom May Expect (vv. 22, 23). When the subjects of the King dom become like the King they incite the hatred, contempt and persecution of the world. Those who pass through this for Christ’s sake should rejoice, for there is great reward laid up for them. 11. The Governing Principle* of the Kingdom (vv. 27-38). 1. Love Your Enemies (v. 27). To love friends Is easy, but to love en emies Is only possible to those who have been made partakers of the di vine nature. 2. Do Good to Those Who Hate You (v. 27). Love acts according to its own nature. Enmity only stimu lates love to act in harmony with its own laws. 3. Bless Them That Curse You (v. 28). Injury by words is hard to let go unchallenged. 4. Pray for Them Which Despite fully Use You (v. 28). Christ’s own example Is the best commentary on this precept (Luke 23:24; cf. Acts 7:60). 5. Patiently Endure Wrong and In jury (v. 29). The Christian is not to bristle up in defense of his rights, but rather to suffer insult, injury and even loss. This should not be pressed so far that evildoers can go unchecked. It expresses the law which should gov ern Individual action. 6. Give to Every One That Asketh (v. 30). This does not necessarily mean that the thing asked for should be given. We should give to every one that asketh, but not necessarily the thing asked for. 7. Do as You Wish to Be Done By (r. 31). This is called the “Golden Rule.” If men were to live by this rule the labor problem would be solved. An end would be put to war. International relations would be peace fully adjusted and all profiteering In business would end. 8. Be Merciful (v. 36). The mercy of the Heavenly Father la the grand example. 9. Censorious Judgment Condemned (v. 37). We should not seek out the evil in others for our satisfaction. 10. Danger of Following False Teach ers (v. 39). The one who does not know God and the way to heaven will lead others to ruin. Happily, we have the Scriptures, and the Holy Spirit Is ready to make their meaning known, so there is no excuse. 11. Those Who Reprove Others Should Strive to Live Blameless Lives (vv. 31-46). It is easy to see others’ faults, but hard to see our own. 12. The Sin of Profession Without Fruits (v. 46). The one who professes a life and fellowship with God should practice the principles which reveal the nature of God. 111. The Judgment to Be Applied to the Subjects of the Kingdom (vv. 47-49). 1. The one who hears and does the sayings of Christ the King shall be as secure as the house built upon the Bolld rock. The storms of the Judg ment cannot destroy him, for the Rock of Ages Is Immovable. 2. The one who hears and does not the sayings of Christ shall be over whelmed In the Judgment and go down to utter ruin and destruction. Th* Dangerous Lie. Every lie, great or small, is the brink of a precipice, the depth of which nothing but omniscience can fathom. —C. Reade. Fright. A timid person Is frightened before a danger; a coward during the time; and a courageous person afterward- — Richter. The Christian. A Christian is God Almighiy’g gen-. tiemaQ. —J. C. Ilare. Children Cry for Fletcher’s ™ The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has bet in use for ever thirty years, has borne the signatured —on the wrapper all these V e*2 Ah Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are w Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health Infants and Children*—Experience against Experiment. ” Never attempt to relieve your baby with remedy that you would use for yourß.i What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contalu neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance, its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleen The Children’s Comfort —The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA alwayi In Use For Over 3d Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CINTAUW COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. ► * ► The Dependable Grocery » • You always get the best at this store because qual » , ity goods are the only kind we carry. ; Every item fresh and pure, be it canned goods, ’ talcery goods, or fruits anc.' vegtables. » Our low prices help you to economize. * j Velvet and Lighthouse Flour. * New’s Grocery Store PHONE 79 r f* a 4 LOANS Action terest mmlssions GODB EE, Viadlia, Georgia. TRUST co. Georgia _ Georgia & Florida Railway j Passenger Train Schedule “THROUGH THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITY” Main Line No. 5, daily, leaves Augusta 7:35 a. m., arrives Vidalia 12| p. m., arrives Valdosta 5:35, arrives Madison 12:45. J No. 4, daily, leaves Madison 6:30 a. m.. arrives Valdosta a. m., arrives Vidalia 1:50p. m., arrives Augusta 6:45. Tennille Branch. No. 5-1, daily, leaves Augusta 7:35 a. m., arrives Tenille No. 2-4, daily, ieaves Tennille 2:50 p. m., arrives Augusta Millen Branch. No. 8, daily, leaves Vidalia 6:55 a. m., arrives Milieu 9- No. 9, daily, leaves Millen 9:55 a. m., arrives Vidalia L- " Moultrie Branch. No. 2 9 daily, leaves Nashville 5.00 p. m., arrives M<' ‘ r 12:30 p. m. XT . ai No. 24, daily, leaves Moultrie 1:15 p. m., arrives Nas n 9:30 p. m. R. C HICKS, D. F. KIRKPATRICK, Traffic Manager. Gen. Prasenger