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Poultry Tips
For January
Get those chicks ordered and
in the brooder or brooder house.
January, February and March are
three of the best months to start
layers.
Be sure to have the brooder op
erating and the temperature ad
justed before the chicks arrive
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
In New Location
Opening Saturday, January 10th
In Store Building Formerly
Occupied by Smith Furniture Co.
Larger Place - Bigger Stock - Better Service
Watch For Our Opening Announcement
Come To See Us Saturday, January 10th
In Our New Store on Corner Next to Theatre
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
C. C. and G. T. Spinks
Pembroke, Ga.
Why Just Near About It? -
Drive It!
Road lest and Rate the New Dodge V-Eight
* • ~~\ It’s something you must experience and judge for yourself.
—\ Red Ram V-8 power teams up with Modern Design to usher
\ ™ 4*5 A in a new era of driving mastery. Waste space
\ "TcICST Ar+A'y X.® A ^ as b 600016 usable space. '’Meaningless metal” is no more.
\ '/V "Deadweight” is done. So remarkable are the results that
\ ’ow 1,01 >a a specially planned Road Test Ride has been mapped
\ " * out for you by your friendly Dodge dealer.
\ coaV* 1 * ""■ It’s thoroughly safe. It’s completely revealing.
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SpKiftantoru and Equipmonl ouijtet to chango without notiu.
~ PEMBROKE MOTOR CO.
Phene 35J Pembroke, Georgia
Have confinement ring around
the brooder stove three feet from
the edge of the hover for the
first four days.
Start the chicks with a good
broiler mash or starting mash and
keep the feed before them all the
time.
Provide at least one waterer
for each 100 chicks at first. The
water should be in a number of
spots so the chicks will have no
trouble in finding it.
Avoid letting the litter become
wet and caked. Remove the worst
part, add fresh litter, use lime,
stir, and keep rain from blowing
in.
Scrub, clean and disinfect the
equipment and place out in the
sun to dry after a lot of broilers
is sold. Direct sunlight is the best
of all disinfectants.
Where pullets are raised in con
finement to laying age allow 3
square feet of floor space per bird.
PEMBROKE JOURNAL. PEMBROKE, GEORGIA
Watch the body weights of the
layers. If they begin to lose weight,
feed pellets once a day and in
crease the grain feeding.
Don’t make drug addicts of your
chickens. Never give any medi
cine unless it is for some specific
purpose.
Take care of feed sacks. Open
the sacks carefully and, after they
are empty, hang on wires in feed
room.
It has beep found that with “no
roosts” in the laying house a
poultryman is likely to have more
broodiness and more dirty eggs.
To break hens of egg eating
try rolling a glass egg on the floor
for them to pick at. They soon
get discouraged, but it doesn’t al
ways work .
Ora C. Payne,
County Ext. Agent
Stop Taking
Harsh Drugs for
Constipation
End Chronic Dosing! Regain Normal
Regularity This All-Vegetable Way!
Taking harsh drugs for constipation
can punish you brutally! Their cramps
and griping disrupt normal bowel
action, make you feel in need of re
peated dosing.
When you occasionally feel consti
pated, get gentle but sure relief. Take
Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative contained
in Syrup Pepsin. It’s all-vegetable. No
salts, no harsh drugs. Dr. Caldwell’s
contains an extract of Senna, oldest and
one of the finest «d/»M/laxatives known
to medicine.
Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative tastes
good, acts mildly, brings thorough
relief comfortably Helps you get regu
lar, ends chronic dosing. Even relieves
stomach sourness that constipation
often brings.
Try the new 25C size Dr. Caldwell’s.
Money back if not satisfied. Mail bottle
to Box 280, New York 18, N. Y.
Ad C 53-2 Job No. 448
1 col. 56 lines—B&W
Weekly Npps. —1953
Birth Announcements
The many friends of Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Arnold will be inter
ested to learn that they are the
proud parents of a fine young
son, who was born on January
2, and has been named Thomas
Morgan Arnold. His father is in
the U. S. Navy and is on foreign
duty. The mother will be remem
bered as Nellie Page. The mother
and litle son are at the home of
her mother in Pembroke.
Mr. J. Dixie Harn, popular clerk
and treasurer of the City of Pem
broke is having much trouble with
his teeth, or as it is now, with
those that he did have. For he
has been having most of them
if not all removed. For some time
he has not been in good health
as he should have been, and much
of his trouble has been traced to
his teeth.
GEORGIA, BRYAN COUNTY
Will be sold at public outcry,
for cash on the 17th day of Jan
uary, 1953, at ten o’clock A. M.
at the dwelling on the farm owned
by the late Jack E. Stubbs (the
H. E. Brown old home-place) in
the 1380th District said County,
the following personalty:
One 1951 Ford tractor, harrow
and equipment,
One one-horse wagon,
Several plows and farming
tools
One mule.
Property may be seen by con
tacting Rex Stubbs.
This January 6th, 1953.
W. 0. Stubbs,
Executor,
Estate of Jack E. Stubbs
GEORGIA, BRYAN COUNTY
By virtue of an order of Ordi
nary of said County, there will
be sold at public outcry on the
first Tuesday in February, 1953,
at the courthouse door in Pem
broke, Georgia, between the legal
hours of sale, to the highest and
best bidder for cash, the follow
ing described land, to-wit:
Eighty six acres, more or less
lying in the 1380th G. M.
District, Bryan County, Geor
gia, and bounded on the North
by lands of W. O. Stubbs, East
by lands of C. C. Slater and
R. W. Shuman, on the South ।
by lands of H. B. Warnell i
and on the West by lands of
H. B. Warnell.
Purchaser to pay for titles and I
documentary stams.
This January sth, 1953.
G. C. Bailey,
Administrator,
Estate of J. W. Bailey
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Figuring Roof Pitch
Roof pitch is expressed as a
fraction or as a certain number of
inches of “rise” for each foot of
“run.” These terms and others
cr
SPAN ~
that are relevant are defined in
the sketch shown here.
If a roof rises 8 feet and has a
24-foot span, the pitch is 8/24 or
1/3. This same roof would have a
rise of 8 inches for each foot of
run. The pitch of the roof could be
expressed in either manner.
Roof pitch should be known be
fore roofing material is selected
for a building. All styles of asphalt
shingles, the most widely used
material, are suited for roofs with
a pitch of 1/6 (4-inch rise per
foot of run) or greater. This in
cludes virtually all pitched roof
houses. For roofs only slightly
pitched, properly specified asphalt
roll roofing is recommended. For
roofs with less than 1 inch of rise
per foot of run, built-in roofing is
used.
Keep Wood Dry
To Stop Termites
Termites cannot exist without'
moisture and can be controlled by
keeping excess water out of the
wood parts of a house. . .
Keeping moisture from rising;
out of the ground is important
If a basementless house is built
with a crawl space, the crawl
space should be well insulated.
Wood sidewalls or framework
should not be placed directly on a
masonry foundation. Masonry, ana
wood should be separated by a
strip of damp-proof material.
ROOFING WEIGHTS VARY
Asphalt roofing is made in
weights from 45 pounds to 325
pounds per square. A square is the
■mount of material needed to
cover MX) square feet of roof area.
REMOVE MILDEW
Before mildewed surfaces are
painted, they should be washed,
with an alkaline solution and
with dean watt*.
Eisenhower Urges Nation ’
j Support March of Dimes
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President-elect Eisenhower meets 1953 March of Dimes Poster
Girls Pamela (left) and Patricia O'Neil, of Raleigh, N. C. 1,
NEW YORK ClTY—President
elect Dwight D. Eisenhower called
on the American public to support
the 1953 March of Dimes being
conducted throughout the nation
during all of January.
He joined in the annual appeal
after meeting the two Raleigh,
N.C., sisters who are pictured on
the 1953 March of Dimes poster.
They are Patricia, 6, and five
year-old Pamela O’Neil, both of
whom were stricken with polio
but now are recovered completely.
“It's hard to believe that these
are the same little girls whose
pictures are On the March of
Dimes poster,’’ he noted. “Now
Veteran House Young Again
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The new house, top, grew out of the old house, below. Chieflyl
responsible for the new look are colorful asphalt roof shingles and
new white siding. The house had been abandoned for many years]
before an enterprising couple bought it and remodeled it
Look Under Surface to See
Real Worth of Old Dwelling
Old houses are like sloppily
wrapped packages. What shows on
the outside isn’t any clue to what’s
underneath.
The fact is that many old houses
are in considerably better shape
than they seem to be. They’re
more wornout on the surface than
underneath, and if new roofing,
siding, and interior finish are put
on an old framework a smart
looking, comfortable home is often
the result.
The discerning house - hunter
shouldn’t be discouraged by poor
exterior appearance. He should
pry off a section of old siding to
examine sheathing and studs, and
he should closely inspect the roof
deck and rafters, joists, sills, the
foundation, and other structural
parts. L ,
If the structure, or most of it, is
sound, chances are good that the
house could be rebuilt at consid-
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1953
they’re completely recovered from
polio, thanks to the generosity of
the American people.”
He urged all Americans “to
help the others like them by join
ing the March of Dimes.”
Later, he joined the poster,
girls in making a short film which
is being shown by television sta
tions throughout the nation.
This year’s March of Dimes
follows the all-time record polio
epidemic of 1952 in which more
than 55,000 were stricken. At the
beginning of 1953, there were
58,000 polio victims of former:
years still undergoing treatment,:
with financial help from local
March of Dimes chapters.
erably less than the cost of a com
parable new dwelling.
In remodeling the house pic- :
tured above in “before” andi
“after” versions, the first step was
to patch the foundation and put
in new sills. Then the roof was
reconditioned with hexagonally,
shaped asphalt shingles. Contrib-.
uting basic weathering ability,
fire-resistance, and a choice of>
solid and blended colors, new'
, asphalt roofing usually can be ap- (
plied directly on top of the worn-]
■ out material. i
To complete the major work on l
I the exterior, the old broken sid-'
। ing boards were covered with new
I white siding shingles.
Interior improvements began
■ with new flooring. The remnants:
I of old plaster were removed and'
insulating board was laid over the:
i plaster lath. New wiring and;
■ plumbing and a new heating sys
■ tern were installed.