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THE NEWMAN HERALD. NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1921
FARM BUREAU DEPARTMENT.
B. M. DRAKE, Secretary.
Postofflce, Turin, Ga.
Residence phone 3G23.
Offico, Chamber of Commerce.
Office phono 45.
MISS LORINE COLLINS—
Home Demonatration Agent
PoBtofllce, Nownan, Ga,
Residence phone 399-J.
Office, Chamber of Commerce.
PLAN FOR A CO-OPERATIVE
SWEET POTATO CURING-HOUSE—
The following plan Is suggested for
securing the funds with which to build
a potato curing-houso. We hope It will
■ have tho earnest attention of everyone
interested in the prosperity of tho coun
ty. It is based upon tho suggestion
made at a meeting of a few potato-
growers and othor interested parties on
.Tune 29, and wo are convinced can be
carried out if it has the support of the
farmers who are planting potatoes for
market. If you have any potatoes
planted that you would like to store in
a ouring-houso in Nownan you are re
quested to notify tho County Agent and
pledge your suppfcrt of the plan right
away. There is no present prospect of
any othor potato houso being built at
Nownan this year.
Plan.
1. Tho house shall bo built by a co
operative company consisting of potato-
growers and othor interested citizens. ■
2. Tho itock shall bo of two kinds—
common and preferred. Tho common
stock shall bo sold to growors of pota
toes only, who liava potatoes that they
expect to store. Tho preferred stock
shall bo sold to any who are willing to
invest in it for profit or for tho general
good.
3. Shares of tho common stock shall
have tho par value of $10, and sliull bo
paid in throe installments, as follows:
$3 Aug. I, 1021; $3 Nov. 1, 1921; and
$4 Nov, 1, 1922. Tho subscriber'shall
have the option of paying thc^Novomber,
1921, installment in sweet potatoes prop
erly graded and crated, by giving notice
of such intention by Oct. 10.
4. Shares of preferred stock shall have
the par value of $10, and shall bo paid
in three installments, ns follows: $3 Aug.
1, 1921; $3 Nov. 1, 1921; $4 Nov. 1,
1922.
6, The preferred stock shall have
precedence of the common stock in enso
of tho liquidation of the company’s as
sets. It shall henr 8 per cent, interest,
which shall bo tho first charge upon tho
income of the company nftor current cost
of operation is paid.
(1. Tho common stock shall bear 0 per
cent, interest, which shnll bo paid out of
the income of tho company after opera
ting expenses, interest on the proferred
stock and sinking or resnrvo fund have
been provided for.
7, Tho charge for storage shall bo 2Go.
per bushel crate, and no reduction shall
be made in this charge until all the pre
ferred stock has been redeemed, except
with the consent of the holders of the
preferred slock.
8, The money procured from storage
charges shall be applied first to pay -
rout operating expenses; second, lo pay
interest on preferred stock; third, to
create n sinking fund until such fund
shall equal the annual interest on tho
preferred stock; fourth, lo pay interest
on tho common stock; fifth, any balance
that shall be left to be applied to the
redemption of tho, preferred stock until
nil of the preferred stock shall have boon
taken up; sixth, when the preljorred Block
THE CLUB CAMP A SUCCESS—
Tho camp of the Coweta County Club
Girls was bold at Sargent June 20, 30,
July I and 2. About fifty club girls ami
ton teachers were present. Teachers
from all tho schools that havo organized
ciubs wore invited. A picnic supper was
served Wednesday niglit, and gainos and
songs worn enjoyed until a late hour.
Each of tho girlB wob asked to bring
n loaf of brond, whiclt was judged
Thursday morning by Mrs. Sibley, Coun
ty Homo Denmonstration Agent for
Spalding county. Susie Smith, of Klim
school, won first prize; Fannie Sue Don-
ogan, of Raymond school, ami Katherine
Strong, of Mt. Cannel school, tying for
second plaee; and Florida Royeton, of
HugginB Bchool, winning third prize.
Thursdny tho girls wore taught various
forms of basketry, and somo very protty
onos wore made. Johnnie Mao Carnes,
of Midway school, won first prize—an
aluminum boilor.
Thursday night tho County Board of
Education, .members of the local board
and their wives, Prof, and Mrs. J. M.
Starr and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. McBride
wero entertained at a six o ’clock dinner,
prepared and sorved by, the third and
fourth your club girls. Interesting talks
wore made by members of tho board, by
Superintendent Starr and Mrs. McBride,
and tho reports made by the teachors
as to club work being done by ouch
school represented.
Frlday’l program consisted of the dif
ferent plumes of sewing—Shrinking tho
cloth, cutting ami baBtlng; and the
fourth year girls in cutting and stamp
ing luncheon sets. Grace Bridges, of
Sargent school, won the prize.
Friday evening the girls enjoyed
woinor roast on the creek, to which sev
eral friends woro invited.
This is the flret yoar the girls have
had tlie pleasure of camping, and, necd-
Iosb to say, it wns thoroughly enjoyed
by everyone present, and all wore benefit
ed in many ways.
Tho camp was ably managed by our
demonstration agent, Miss Lorlne Col
lins, assisted by Mrs, Franklin Sibley, of
Griffin. Wo consider tho work being
done by MIhh Collins most important,
and with tho co-operation of the people
of tho comity wo will in tho nonr future
have more economical housewives, and
housekeeping will no longer bo consid
ered a drudgery, but a pleasure.
Wo havo boon invited to camp at Ray
mend next yoilr, and shnll bo looking
forward to the time with much interest
and enthusiasm. Elsie Hicks,
Pros’t Snrgont Club, Chairman of Com
mittee.
Public Health Service
MISS ANNIE TRABER,
Red Cross Public Health Nurse-
Chamber of Commerce- ’Phono 4G-
WORK OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICE IN COWETA COUNTY—
, , . - During the school period we gave ouv
shall have been taken up tho money do- t j me j 0 Hl .),ool children, as we all
rived from storage charges which re
mains after operating expenses ami in
terest on tho common stock havo bbon
paid and a reasonable reserve fund has
been established, shnll be divided among
the patrons of the storage house In pro
portion to their patronage.
9. There shall bo not Icsb than fifty
shares of common stock, and not loss
than 100 slinres of preferred stock. No
one may hold more than one shave of
common stock nor more than 20 slinres
of preferred stoek.
10. Each share of common stock is en
titled to one vote, and the policies of
the .company shall be controlled by tho
holders of the common stock.
11. When GO shares of common stock
and 100 shares of preferred stock have
been subsribed for, the holders of the
common stock shall moot and organize
by electing a president, vice-president-,
secretary niul treasurer. They shall also
appoint a building committee and a bus
iness manager, who shnll be empowered
to make contracts for tho construction
of n potato curing-house,
12. Each subscriber for the common
stock shall contract to furnish the house
either a certain number of bushols of
sweet potatoes or the merchantable pro
duct of a certain acreage, properly
graded and crated,
13. The company shnll also appoint- a
marketing committee to co-operate with
the business manager in prescribing
standards for grading, and in finding
markets for the sweet potatoes to be
stored in the bouse.
B. M. Drake, County Agent.
GOOD PASTURE
DEMONSTRATION—
Tlio Ceutrnl of Georgia railway main
agemeut, realizing the importance of
good pnstures to the development of the
livestock business, is eo-opornting with
the extension service in establishing one
demonstration pasture in each county
served by its line. In Coweta county
this demonstration pasture has been
placed with Mr. T. B. Sanders, about
4V6 miles from Nownan, on the Roscoe
rend.
The three grasses considered best
adapted to pastures on lands of the typo
selected—Dnllis grass, carpet grass and
leapedexa—were sowed by Mr. Samlors
in March, and have made a very good
growth, so that the pasture is now main
taining a considerable bunch of cattle
in good shape. While the pnsture has
not anywhere near reached its full de
velopment, it is already well worth
seeing.
On Saturday. July 23, at 10 o’clock
a. m., the officials of the Central
know that children who are not in good-
physical condition certainly cannot take
tho education the schools offer thorn.
Tho State Board is anxious for onch
child to havo physical examination once a
ear; so wo know that all are in favor
of the examination, “Health first.”
School Children Inspected.
Total number of children, 1,700. Of
the 1,700 the following defects Were
present: Defective vision, 154; sore
eyes, 1; defective hearing, 10; suspi
cious adenoids, 33; defective teeth, 526;
skin' diseases, 8; chicken pox, 0; perdieu,
losis, 10; auspicious goiter, 1.
Of tho sumo number 1,645 were weigh
ed and tile following weights recorded
Normal weight, 392; overweight, 306;
underweight, 957.
We have gotten results from much of
the work done. We are anxious that nil
school children, with defects shall let
their family physician examine them,
and have the defects looked nftor. This
will give the children a bettor clmnco in
school.
We have rendered other services be
sides school work, ns follows:, Nursing
visits, 24; home visits, 59; school visits,
56; sanitary visits, 21; talks on lienlth
nt schools, 32; child's welfare visits, 2,
infant- welfare, 26; tuberculosis visits,
prenatal visits, 4; typhoid visits, 1.1;
offico visits, 200; othor visits, 20; ty
phoid inoculations, 133.
Annie Trnber,
Red Cross Public- Health Nurse.
Summer is the busy time for the mail
order man. Ho realizes merchants in
towns like Carrollton are apt to let their
business drift a little as the long, hot
days eome on, so they flood the mails
with new offers, and spend thousands of
dollars to toll you that “prices are go
ing up before all—mul you’d better lay
in a supply of this or that while it is
cheap.’’ Don’t be “easy,” as the boys
say. Just romomber that these felows
make their hay while the sun shines hot
test. And to the home merchant we would
say—Jon’t lot them put this stuff over
on you ngnln when, if you keep up your
advertising through the warm months
the same as the cold, yon can make a
very large part of their efforts count for
naught Tell the home people what you
have to offer them now for their future
needs, just ns the mail order man is tell
ing them. And nine tunes out of ten
they’ll believe you before they will the
catalogue man.—Carrollton Free Press.
of
Georgia railway and Mr. Paul Tabor
pasture specialist of the extension ser
vice, will bo at Mr. 8anders’ pasture to
inspect it and talk over the work with
any who may be interested, and to make
suggestions in regard to pasture-building.
In behalf of Mr. Siuulers and the
Central of Gedrgia railway I am author
ized to invite any farmers interested in
improving their pastures to meet, with
them and inspect the work that has
been done.
B. M. Drake, County Agent.
hire. W. H. Foiton, of Cartersville,
who celebrated her S6th birthday earlier
in the mouth, says that she does not re
member so torrid a Juno in all her life
as this has been. “In 1854,’’ she said,
“we had a killing frbst- on May 1, and
that was followed by a long drought,
with torrid days and cool nights until
the middle of July. Wo almost failed
in all our crops then, 67 years ago. But
never do I remember such a protracted
spell of extreme heat in June as this
month has furnished.”
o
Communicated.
THE STARR DISTRICT SCHOOL.
Editor Herald: Your Turin corres
pondent 1ms lind quite a bit to say in
a somewhat bitter tono ahout the Starr
school district, which includes Sharps-
burg, Turin, Bailey, Pondview and partB
of Longstreet and Standing Rock, con
solidated. In justleo to all, a reply is
imperative—in part, nt least, Ho cen
sures the County Bonrd ol’ Education
for tho consolidation, placing on the
bonrd all the blame for this terrible (?)
calamity. Ho then ridicules the idon of
floating bonds, and lastly, brings in the
poor old down-trodden negro I
Please lot mo state here Hint I
hold your correspondent in the highest
esteem, nnd ftin sorry that he was not
present at the various meetings hold to
discuss the union of tho above-named
schools.
Your correspondent stales that the
Bonrd of Education took action without
the knowledge or consent of anyone con
cerned, This is an orror—unintentional
no doubt, but an error nevertheless. The
Board of Education did consolidate the
districts named above, complying with
the request of the trustees of tho schools
namod, ufter said trustees had boon ad
vised by the patrons and other citizens
of tlioir communities. Soveral meetings
woro hold in Sharpsburg and several
in Turin. No specinl invitations
woro Bent to anyone; but, as is the cus
tom in all rural communities, announce
ments of tho meetings were made in tho
schools, and the children requested to
toll thoir parents and neighbors to come
out to those meetings. The announce
ments evidently did not reach your cor
respondent; but be nsBureed that no in
tontionnl slight was meant for anyone.
The Board of Education did not try to
run over us rough shod, nor ram anything
down our throats that we did not want.
Quite tho contrary. I was a member of
the board of trustees of Sharpsburg
school district at the time, and found
the Board of Education and the County
Superintendent of Schools always ready
and willing to co-operate with us in the
upbuilding of our schools. Personalities
aside, my hat is off to our Board of
Education and to tho Superintendent of
Schools; and so are the hats of one hum
dred and ninety-eight others in our com
munity.
As to the floating of bonds, I can see
no reasonable objection to this method
of raising funds for the object named,
Tho first series of bonds mature in 1923
and the last in 1939—a period of six
teen Inog years, during which this com
munity is asked to raise, not $15,000,
but only $10,000. And ill return wliat
do we get? A school second to none in
Coweta county. And when do' we get
it—in 1939? No! We got it Sept.l,
1921, nnd by 1939 the boys we put in
school this fall will bo helping to pay
for tho school building that they and
thoir neighbors will have received so
much bonofit from.
Tho school dnys of many of our boys
and girls will soon be over, and if we
lo not fit them to “go forth to tho bat
tles of life” now it will soon bo too
late.
Tho Central of Georgia railway trav
erses this district a distance of .6 miles,
mul had bonds fulled to carry they would
linvo paid nothing; but as bonds did
carry the railroad company will pay its
pro rata. Two banks and various cor
porations are in the same boat,
Could we afford to defeat bonds? Wo
didn’t think so. The school • building
will be located midway between Turin
and Sharpsburg,, which will bo conven
ient for tho children of both towns. As
to the children of Longstreet, Pondview,
Bailey and Standing Rock districts, it
is plnnned to haul them in. Your cor
respondent states that these districts
do not need nor want” this, consult
dated school. Anyway, they, asked td'
ho placed in this district, and when
voting time came they proved that they
meant wliat they said. I havo been told
that every vote from Pondview district
was cast for bonds. Only one from
Longstreet, one from Standing Rock
nnd a very few from Bailey, were cast
against bonds.
Your correspondent says “if the peo
pie of Turin and' Sharpsburg want a un
ion school lot them build it, for ‘out
side™’ do not want it.” Yet when
election day came tho fiercest, opposi
tion was found within the limits of the
two little towns, ami not among the peo
pie of the country communities.
Your correspondent raises the negro
question, and asks “what benefits he
will derive from this; and if none, why
not?’’ That is a problem for the Boar
of Education, and I can only state my
views. I have the utmost confidence in
our present bonrd, and faith enough ill
their successors, whoevor they may be, to
believe that tho negro will be treated
fairly. I don’t believe that our Board
of Education is quite as bad as Hugh
Dorsey tried to mnke the world think
all Georgians are; neither do I jie-
liove that we have, or ever will have, a
Hugh Dorsey on our Board of Education
or ns Superintendent of Schools. Do
you?
Your correspondent asks: “Who gave
tlie land for the present school buildings
in Turin and Sharpsburg?” Thnt wns
before my day, but I have been told
that the late Dr. Page gave the land in
Turin, and the late Milos Jones gave tho
land in Sharpsburg; and I venture tlie
assertion that if these old soldiers were
living now more vnliant champions of
bonds and better schools could not be
found in Coweta. It is proposed that the
land these men gave, together with the
buildings that have been erected thereon
be sold and the procoods go into the new
school building. So, yon see, that long
years after aU that is mortal of these
good men had returned to dust and their
spirits to the God who gave them, they
will have a new monument erceted to
them in this school buildng—a monu
ment- that will endure even after our
grandchildren havo passed away. The
light of the lives of these men has gone
out, but they left an immortal afterglow
that can never be dimmed.
Before closing, please let me tell the
people of Coweta the result of tho bond
election. Out of a total registration of
207 men, 176 voted—138 for bonds, nnd
38 against. Out of a total registration
to the front nnd bore the brunt of the
tight.. To the hundred and ninety-nine
my warmest congratulations are extend
ed. For the thirty-nine, T wish it under
stood that I have the utmost respect for
their convictions. Borne of them are my
personal friends, and I shall always lovo
them. Others are possibly strangers to
me, but I hope to know them in the years
to come, and, knowing them nnd being
known by them, I pray that a lovo such
as a brother for brother may spring
up and last throughout eternity.
It’s all over now, bo let’s got to bus
iness and ail co-operate heartily with
iur last resting-place with a prayer and
Education and Superintendent of Schools
to make this tho banner school, not only
of the county, but of this part of .Geor
gia; and may our boys and girls pass
the grass-covered mounds thut shall mark
our last resting place with a prnyer and
blessing long after these tired hands
shall have been folded in the long, long
sleep. W. L. McLonn.
Sharpsbnrg, Ga., June 29th.
ly figure ns the chief causes of our
but there 1b also tlie mistaken belief of
many that when property is insured
against fire the insurance companies are
tho only ones to worry if it burns. As
a matter of fact, insurance coats are so
closely interwoven with our social aud
economic fabric that we are all affected
by the fire -waste.
“The careless or Ignorant citizen re
sponsible for a fire taxes himself as well
as his follows. When this truth becomes
recognized by a majority of the Amer
ican public, then will our fire waste be
gin to decrease.”
o
BURNING AMERICA.
‘At the annual meeting of the Na
tional Bonrd of Fire Underwriters, ’ ’
says ‘ ‘ Safeguarding America Against
Fire, ’ ’ official organ of the National
Board of Fire Underwriters, “there was
presented an authoritative estimate of
America’s fire losses during 1920 which
should causo the most heedless to pause.
The destruction of over $500,000,000
worth of property in a single year, or
approximately $1,370,000 a day, is a
tax that cfinriot be continued without
serious economic results. In addition to
this there was loss of life whioli, while
not accurately known, must have been
heavy.
“The staggering total of waste has
not yet been classified, so it is impossi
ble at present to give the losses by
division into the separate hazards. There
is no doubt, however, that intentional
and unintentional incendiarism were
large factors in causing an aggregate
of damages never before approached ex
cept in 1906, when the San Francisco
catastrophe occurred. This was so, de
spite the fact there was no conflagration
of any magnitude during the entire year.
“Besides the incendiarism of those in
dividuals with asbestos consciences who
‘burned for profit,’ arid the depredations
ofpyromaniacs, there was the uncon
scious incendiarism of the business man
who, in the face of trade depression and
disappearing profits, relaxed his former
vigilance in regard to fire. He neglected
safeguards, allowed rubbish to accumu
late, postponed repairs of heating and
lighting apparatus, forgot to have in
spections made, and became generally
careless. His employees naturally re
flected his mental attitude, and likewise
grew careless. The wage-earner out of
work became more negligent at home and
also helped to swell the total fire dam
ago that day by v day added to Our na
tional, bonfire.
^Webster’s
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MERRIAM
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‘Carelessness and ignorance normal-
firhs,
Little Mary was visiting her grand
mother in the country. Walking in the
garden, she chanced to see a peacock, a
bird Bhe had never Been before. After
gazing in silent admiration, she ran
quickly into the houso and cried out:
“Oh, granny, come and seel One of
'your chickens ib in bloom.”
Two hundred and six time-expired
men of the American army of oeeups
tion, thoir European brides and ninety
ehildren, sixty-Blx of whom are less than
a year old, were delivered at pier 5, H 0
boken, N. J„ one day last week by the
armv tronsnort “Cambria.” T),„ i._:, ,
army transport “Cambria.” The bridal
freight hIbo include a squad of wives
freight also Included a squad of wives
of sailors on the United Btntes slfin
“Olympia,” Dewey’s old flagship, rt l.
cently returned to Philadelphia from
Trieste. The army and nuvy brides be
tween them spoke eleven different Inn-
guages. The sixty-Bix babies spoke only
one language, but that was loud and in-
sistent. Five army nurses and several
officers of the medical corps were or
ganized into a baby clinic nnd they cer
tainly earned their passage.
He—And why do you think I am a
poor judge of human nature?
She—Because you have such a good
opinion of yourself.
GRADUALLY SLIPPING?
Interesting Experience of a Texas Lady Who Declares That if More
Women' Knew About Cardui They Would Be Spared
Much Sickness and Worry.
Navasota, Texas.—Mrs. W. M. Peden,
of this place, relates the following Interest
ing account of how she recovered her
strength, having realized that she was
actually losing her health:
"Health is the greatest thing in the
world, and when you feel that gradually
slipping away from you, you certainly sit
up and take notice. That Is what I did
some time ago when I found myself in a
very nervous, run-down condition of
health. I was sotlred and felt so lifeless
I could hardly go at all.
“I was just no account for work, I
would get a bucket of water and would
feel so weak I would have to set it down
before I felt like I could lift it to the shelf.
In this condition, of course, to do even
my housework was a task almost im
possible to accomplish.
"1 was . . . nervous and easily upset.
I couldn’t rest well at night and was.. „
just lifeless.
"1 heard of Cardui and after reading I
decided 1 had some female trouble that
was pulling me down. I sent for Cardui
and began it ..
"In a very short while after I began the
Cardui Home Treatment 1 saw an im
provement and it wasn’t long until I was
all right—good appetite, splendid rest,
and much stronger so that I easily did my
house work.
“Later 1 took a bottle of Cardui as a
tonic. lean recommend Cardui and glad
ly do so, for if more women knew, it
would save a great deal of worry and
sickness."
The enthusiastic praise of thousands oi
other women who have found Cardui
helpful should convince you that it is
worth trying. All druggists sell it.
I. 7S
BY W. V BARNES
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All creditors of the estate of James
B. Hines, deceased, late of said State
and county, are hereby notified to ren
der in their demands to the
ed according to law: and all persons
Indebted to said estate are required to
make Immediate payment to the un
dersigned. This^lay 20,
Madras, Ga. Administrator.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All creditors of the estate of Wilbur
R. Sewell, late of Coweta county,
Ga., deceased, are hereby notifled to
render in their demands to the under
signed according to law; and all per
sons Indebted to said estate are re
quired to make tmrnedlate payment t 0
the undersigned. ^Thts^May S 0 , 1921,
Marguerite Sewell,
Administrators,
6 Oxford Place, Kirkwood, Ga.
NOTICE OP DISSOLUTION.
GEORGIA—Coweta County: ,
Notice Is hereby given that the Arm
of Lipscomb & Broadwater, heretofore
encaged in the meat market and gro
cery business in the City of NewnaiL
Coweta county, Ga., is this day dissolv
ed by mutual consent, O. L. Broadwater
retiring therefrom. The business will
be conducted at the same place by J. H.
Linscomb, and the said J. H- Lipscomb
wUl settle all firm liabilities and re
ceipt for all indebtedness due the firm.
This 23nd day of
OTIS L. BROADWATER,
of 77 women, 61 voted voted for bonds
and 1 against. (Three cheers for our
glorious women!)
Now, to the Board of Education and
to our Superintendent of Schools we of
fer thanks from the bottom of our hearts
for their earnest co-operation; and wo
are especially grateful to Mr. B. AT.
Drake and Prof. Starr—not that thev
did it all, but because they were more
R
AT-SNAP
KILLS RATS
Also mice. Absolutely prevents odors
frnni carcass, one package proves this.
RAT-SNAP comes in cakes—no mixing
with other food. Guaranteed.
35c. *ue <l cake) enough for Pantry,
for Chicken House,
C °*l •’'n°«l*e na (5 cakes)** enough for all
farmland out-buildings storage build
ings, or factory buildings.
Sold and Guaranteed by
LEE-KING DRr ® w
COWETA DRUG * BOOK COMPANY.
LEARN TO
DRIVE THIS CAR
ECONOMY 1
DRIVE to and from this shop is an economy
drive. If you spend sorae money with us
you will save money in the course of a year.
Let us care for your car and it will aliyays render
you a faithful accountimg.
IMS JACKSON ST.
Come “to
Excursion
Fares via
Central of Georgia Railway
THE RIGHT WAY