Newspaper Page Text
habitual Constipation Cured
in 14 to 21 Days
“LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative forHabitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
to induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. , Very Pleasant to Take. »60c
per bottle.
HaU’sGatarrhMedicine
Those who are in a “run down” con
dition will notice that Catarrh bothers
them much more than when they are
tn good health. This fact proves that
while Catarrh Is a local disease. It Is
greatly Influenced by constitutional
conditions. HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE Is a Tonic and Blood Puri
fier, and acts through the blood upon
the mucous surfaces of the body, thus
reducing the inflammation and restor
ing normal conditions.
▲ll druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
ALL OUT OF SORTS?
Bo Was This Good Woman Who Telia
Her Experience.
All too often women accept their
pains and aches as natural to their
•ex. They fail to realize that weak
kidneys are often to blame for that
backache, those headaches, dizzy spells
and that tired, depressed feeling.
Thousands have found new health and
strength by helping the weakened
kidneys with Doan’s Pills—a stimulant
diuretic. This case is one of many in
this locality.
Mrs. J. H. Harbin. Railroad St., Mc-
Rae, Oa., says: “I began to suffer
from lame back. There wan Just n
dull, heavy ache in my back all thi
time and I was troubled worse when
on my feet. I tired easily and became
•xcited at the least thing. I also had
severe pains in my head. Doan’s Pills
cured me. I felt entirely well again.’
_ Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
•imply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan|s Pills—the same that Mrs.
Harbin had. Foster-Milburn Co..
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
1 Practical f
| Nurse Tells i
Mrs. N. E. Snow, of Route ajr
& 1. near Paris, Tenn., tells the
story of her experience as
2 follows:
w “I am 62 years old and I ©
K® have been a practical nurse £.
3l for more than 20 years, t&k- BC
V lng mostly maternity cases. 10)
tffii One of my daughters suffered
2 from cramping at . . . She
W would just bend double and ®w>
B hatrs to go to bed.
CARDUI
1 Tin Woman’s limit I
was recommended to her and
Sk she only had to take about wr
V two bottles, when she hardly (©})
f£% knew that it was . . she 0^
suffered so little pain. 7 V
ES I “My youngest daughter (M
ggi was run-down, weak and 2
Z nervous, and looked like she as
V didn’t nave a bit of blood
2 left—just a walking skeleton, O;
2 so appetite and tired all ths 2
V time. I gave her two bottles ®
B of Cardin. It built her up
2 and she began eating ana 2
w soon gained in weight and w
B has been so well since.”
2 Cardui, ths Woman’s Tonic, 2
w has helped suffering woman B
B for over forty yean. Try it A
B all druggists’. 2
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Phone Seven - Nine
NEW !
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FOR YOUR
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Fresh Vegetables
and Groceries
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FARM
STOCK NEWS
BY C. G. GARNER, County Agent, and MISS WILLIE MAE VANN,
Home Demonitration Agent.
Rush Early Cotton Poisoning
Right now is the time to keep rush
ing the early application of poison
whether you use the molasses mix
ture or the dust for the early pre
square poisoning.
Try Out Your Dusting Machine
If you have a two row or even a
hand dusting machine take it out and
put it to running in the field for at
least thirty minutes and see that all
parts are properly adjusted and
ready for dusting. To wait later
may find you with a machine that has
some part wrong and having to wait
for a piece to come before you can
dust.
Recently the County Agent and a
farmer at Statesboro took a certain
two row machine out in the field and
tried it out. The brushes in it fail
ed to work a few’ minutes of running
and the machine failed to put out the
dust regularly. They wired the
manufacturers and they sent a man
down to see what could be done
about changing the brush. Farmers
of that county had bought 16 of that
make of machines and if the county
agent had not had that done they i
would all have been in trouble right
when they were needing their ma-'
chines. Ido not know of but. one of;
that make of machine that has been
sold in this county and the owner
has been advised to try it out thor- 1
ough'y.
Sulphate of Ammonia and Nitrate
of Soda
Farmers are asking me the relative
value of sulphate of ammonia and i
Nitrate of Soda as top dressing for |
cotton and corn. Sulphate of am-!
monia usually runs 24 1-4 per cent, i
while all of the soda I have seen sold;
runs 18 per cent ammonia. Supl
phate of ammonia is supposed to he|
a little slower acting and so should
he put under cotton at the time of j
planting, thought it car, be put around :
right after the cotton is chopped. It i
should be put around corn when the j
corn is first plowed or by the time j
it is knee high. It will still do good
if the corn is larger but should be
put there earlier than Nitrate of Soda
•We recommend putting the Nitrate
of Soda out when the corn is waist
high. So the su’phate of ammonia;
should be put out sooner.
Nitrate of Soda at $6.1 per ton is
equal in cost per pound of p’ant
food to Sulphate of ammonia at
$91.33 per ton. Sulphate of am
monia can be bought right now for
S7O per ton here. Now that Nitrate
of Soda is so hard to get farmers
wanting some for top dressing will
do well to get the sulnhate right now
and use it. It c»n b“ obtained in
either Lyons or Vidalia.
Snap Bean Market Floode-i
The snap bean market is flooded
now and thev are sel'ing at from 50c
to $1 per bushel hamoer delivered in
Atlanta or SI to $1.50 delivered
Northern markets.
Cucumbers have been graduallv
doclinins> but it is honed the local
! crop will al be shipped before the
■ drop comes.
i Dew Berries have been showing
- fine returns for the first shipments
- and looks as though this years crop
j would be very profitable. This crop
’has proven itself as one of Toombs
l County’s most profitable supplemen-
I tal cash crops and it is to be regret
t ted that so many growers let their
I vines go down from neglect this year
1 The county crop will be pretty good
• | but not near so heavy as it would
> ’ have been had they been looked as
; ter better. There is little excuse for
i! dropping a crop that has been sucess
ful three years because it happened
i to the bad luck of a wet spring and
! rotted in the cars enroute due large
ly to lack of precooling, excess mois
ture, and slow hand'ing from the
■ fields to the market.
Big Stem Jersey Fields Look Fine
The Big Stem Jersey fields look
good now in spite of the late setting.
Urders have been coming in for the
late draws and will soon be coming
in for vines from farmers that war*,
to set them out to get seed for ne:;‘
j years crop. Farmers that are con
tinually jumping around hunting f r
another cash crop can well watch th «
; crop as one pf the best that has evt
been tried in this section. Many of
them will look at it rather doubtful
ly until other sections will take it up
j and take all the edge off of the early
market, then they will jump in and
| want to plant everything in it. The
; early bird is the one that catches the
worm.
Have You Bought Your Calcium
m Arsenate
A farmer came running in Satur
i day wanting some poison to put on
his tobacco,* said the worms were
! starting in it bad. Fortunately a
i merchant here had a little on hand,
j and he got some. Preparedness is :
. one of the greatest things in raising
tobacco and cotton. Don’t wait un
i til the worms are ruining your to
j tacco or .the weevils your cotton to
find some poison. The chanes are
you cannot get it at that time and
even if you can it will take several
days for it to come by freight and '
your cotton or tobacco may ruin in i
! the meantime. Be prepared.
Save Your Oats for Seed
The short crop in the whole state
of Georgia looks as though there wi'l j
be a big demand for seed oats next
fall. If you are one of the few who
jumped right back and planted your
oats over after they were killed and
have a pretty good crop, I believe it
will pay you to keep them for seed
oats next fall if they are Fulghium
or some of the other fall oats.
Rush Your Cotton
Rush your cotton for everything
you can now’. Make it put on fruit
as rapidly as possible and protect
that fruit with poison. Use Nitrate
of Soda or sulphate of ammonia
(100 pounds of soda to the acre is a
light application and is equal to 72
pounds of sulphate of Ammonia) and
rush the crop. They do not hurt
your land at all. It is not the soda
or sulphate that hurts your 'and, but
it is the fact that you are taking off
a good crop and putting nothing
back in the land that hurts your
land.
Toombs County Can Make a
Bumper Cotton Crop
Toombs County can and should
have a bumper cotton crop this year.
If every farmerjn the county w’ou’d
poison his cotton and fertilize it
well and then push it we can make
the cotton. We need every resident
in the county advocating poison and
fertilize. Push it and lets make
thee rop. If you have a heavy crop
planted to each plow of say 15 or
more acres turn around and sow a 1
over 10 acres in peas or soy beans, j
Cut off the sorriest land sow it down!
It needs help and will repay you next
year as well as giving you more hay
this year. Then push the other cot
ton and put soiqe soda or scplhate
of ammonia around it. You cannot
make a successful cotton crop on 15
to 20 acres of cotton to the plow.
Quit trying to make a killing.
No Worms in u Healthy Child
All children troubled with worms have an un
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
flue, there is more or less stomach disturbance, i
GROVE S TASTE!.ESS chill TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im
prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength
ejrng Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
threw Cffor dispel the worms, and the Child will-be
T oeri'ect health Pleasant tc take. 69c tv- t'le ’
Sunday School
’ Lesson'
(By REV. P. B. FJTZWATER, D.D.. Teacher
of English Bible In the Moody Bible Insti
tute of Chicago.)
(®, 1924, Western Newgpaper Union )
Lesson for June 8
EZEKIEL ENCOURAGES THE
EXILES
LESSON TEXT —Ezek. >4:l-30.
GOLDEN TEXT—‘T will seek that
which wus lost, agd bring again that
which was driven away.”—Eaek. 34:16.
PRIMARY TOPlC—Ezekiel Preaching
to the Exiles.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOF
' IC—The Lord Seeking Hie Scattered
People.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADUUT TOP
lC—Eieklel’s Mission to the Exllca.
Ezekiel prophesied in the land of
captivity. The latter part of Jere
miah's ministry was contemporaneous
with that of Ezekiel. The purpose of
his ministry was:
1. To Keep Before the Minds of the
Captives That They Were in Captivity
Because of the Sins of the Nation
(Ezek. 14:23).
2. To Show That God Was Righteous
In His Visitation of Judgment Upon
Them (Ezek. 7:8, 9).
8. To Sustain Their Faith by As
suring Them of Their National Restor
ation, the Punishment of Their Ene
mies and the Final Exalted Place of
Israel Among the Nations When Mes
siah Should Reign (Ezek. 34:20-81). ;
I. Indictment of the False Shep
herd* (vv. 1-10).
Israel’s ruined condition resulted
from the failure of the rulers to prop
erly care for the people of Israel, God’s
sheep. Their sin was that:
1. They Exploited the People In
stead of Shepherding Them (vv. 1-8).
The shepherds were appointed to feed
the flock but Instead of that they fed
themselves, even devouring the sheep
and clothing themselvcA with the wool
thereof.
2. They Failed to Minister to the
Sick, the Diseused and Wounded (v.
4). It is not enough that the shep
herds refrain from doing evil to the
sheep. They are expected to strengthen
the weak and bind up the wounds of
those that have been injured.
3. They Did Not Search Out the
Lost Sheep (vv. 5-9). Sheep left to
themselves wander away. The sheep
are not expected to look after them
selves but to be cared for by the shep
herd. In their scattered condition they
became the prey of wild beasts. None
sought ufter them though they hud
wandered through the mountains and
over the hills.
4. The Lord Held the Priests and
Rulers of Israel Responsible for This
Condition (v. 10). The Lord always
holds those responsible who have been
set over his children.
11. Israel to Be Restored (vv. 11-22).
Though the rulers have so wretched
ly failed, the almighty God will come to
the rescue of His people.
1. He Will Search and Seek Them
Out (vv. 11, 12). Though Israel be
scattered throughout the nations, the
divine shepherd will deliver them from
every place where they have been scat
tered.
2. Will Bring Them Into Their Own
Land (v. 13). This was partly ful
filled in the return of the reinnunt un
der Ezra and Nehemiah, but the real
fulfillment awaits the future.
8. Will Feed Them (vv. 13. 14). He
will not only satisfy them with food.
He will cause them to He down in per
fect contentment and security (vv.
14. 15).
4. Shall No More Be a Prey (v. 22).
Though God’s chosen people have been
scattered through the mountains and
over the hills of the nations and have
been a prey to the repaclous greed of
the many nations, God will one day
deliver his sheep and will judge the
false shepherds.
111. The Coming Good Shepherd
<W. 28-31).
The Instrument through which this
great deliverance is to be wrought Is
the Messiah Himself.
1. He Will Make a Covenant of
Peace (v. 25). This condition of peace
will be brought about by the presence
of tb# Lord among them. The world
and Israel will only know actual peace
when the Prince'of Peace shall come
and rule over the whole earth.
2. Evil Beasts Removed (v. 25). The
redemption which awaits Israel and
the world will not only affect God's
children and their rulers but will bring
about peace even among the animals,
so that His children can sleep In peace
and quiet even In the woods.
8. Showers of Blessing Come Down
(v. 26).
God's chosen people shall be a bless
ing to the world, according to His
original purpose for them. When
these blessings are poured out, It shall
be known that they flow from Jesus
Christ, the good Shepherd. The pur
pose of Israel's choice was that the
world might be blessed through them
(Gen. 12:1-3).
Our Freedom
“It is the way hours of freedom are
spent, that determines, us much as
. . . labor, the moral worth of a
nation.” — Maurice Maeterlinck.
Makes Life Interesting
We live partly hi the past, partly
In the future. That makes life inter
esting.
Success
“Success comes In cans—failure In
can’ts."
I FARQUHAR SLAB BURNER
There is no better time than the pres
ent to cash in on this outfit. You can
make money selling lumber. The
Farquhar Slab Burner is the only engine
gragti iiti|L
*day in the
Fuunhar Bub Burner winter time. JutiStr Until Balt In Kill
WOODRUFF MACHINERY MFG. CO. *
41 South Forsyth Stroot Athah, Go.
I KNOW j
What Is Going On
i: SUBSCRIBE TO it
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*; The Savannah Morning News is strictly a morning paper, ; J
* • printed in the morning, carrying all the latest Associated Press «|
•! news, extra good sporting page, all the latest Stock Market re- *»
!! ports, local, State and foreign news, also four high-class colored , [
| pages of the best comics on Sunday of any paper published in the J J
* • South.
i 1 . j 11
~ < >
;; CASH IN—ADVANCE MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES
• > o
!! Time Daily and Sundays Daily One Sunday Only J J
«. 1 month .75 .65 .30 1!
«• 3 months 2.25 1.95 .90 • ►
< * 6 months 4.50 3.90 1.80 <»
< • . <i
* * 12 mouths 9.00 7.80 3.50 o
• * o
t * •
o it
* 11
| NEW LYONS PHARMACY !
«» * *
I! LOCAL AGENT «•
i. « »
V.
41
t «•
4. ♦ }—• +' • | | | |t |t ~, « •
i! Pay by Check j!
If * O
] | Every man, no matter what his position in life, has a certain num- «*
! [ er bills to pay. Business men, those who have become more ..
than an everage success, always pay their bills by check. You *►
'! can enjoy this same privilege by starting a Checking Account with o
■» *i
this Bank. Your canceled Check is an excellent receipt of pay
‘; ment for any bill. J*
j TOOMBS COUNTY BANK i
- CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - . . $37,000.00 f
:: LYONS GEORGIA J
;; OFFICERS: f
;i W. A. McNATT, President. R. L. PAGE, Vice-Pres. t
W. T. CHINA, Cashier. I
11 *
■* *
f ♦ 'H' 4' '> 'l' '!■ ■*i
ji Georgia & Florida Railway ij
\\ PASSENGER SCHEDULE
o' ~
11 Effective November 11th, 1923. * ►
THROUGH DAILY PULLMAN SERVICE BETWEEN AUGUSTA 1 »
AND JACKSONVILLE ON THE BON-AIR SPECIAL j I
DIRECT CONNECTIONS MADE AT JACKSONVILLE WITH J|
• t THE SEABOARD AIR LINE, ATLANTIC COAST LINE AND 0
:: FLORIDA EAST COAST FOR ALL FLORIDA POINTS. o
:: DIRECT CONNECTIONS MADE AT AUGUSTA FOR RICH- *\
;; MOND, WASHINGTON AND NEW YORK.
ti o
I} 4 |
;; 8:20a 8:00p Lv Augusta Ar 8:40a 6:10p ) |
■ > 10:01a 9:25p St. Clair Lv 7:10a 4:26p "
% 10:50a 10:07p Midville 6:29a 3:34p «>
• 11:27a 10:40p Swainsboro 5:55a 2:52p It
1 11:42a 10:53p Wesley 5:42a 2:37p !l
; 12:40p 11:36p Vidalia 5:00a 1:55p ||
I 1:42p 12:30a Hazlehurst 4:00a 12:37p * *
; 2:45p 1:30a Douglas 3:05a 11:30a < •
; 3:25p 2:07a Willacoochee 2:27a 10:47a t!
* 4:02p 2:46a Nashville 1:51a 10:10a
4:55p 3:40a Ar Valdosta 1:00a 9:05a
l 8:50p 8:00a Jacksonville Lv 9:05p **
► | '*
I VIDALIA AND MILLEN BRANCH •’
> | *
| 6:55a Lv Vidalia Ar 12:35p !!
; 7:48a Lv Stillmore Lv 11:42a ]!
• 9:10a Rr Millen Lv 10:20a 1 *
1 J. E. KENWORTHY, Gen. Put. Agent.
* * ;
[ Augusta, Georgia !!
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f- ••
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