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HOME SERVICE FOR |
EVERYBODY IN NEED
Do you know what the present day |
Home Service of the American lied !
Cross Is?
Many people do not know that, he* |
sides completing the work for ex-Jterv- j
Ice men, especially the disabled. It pro
vides the same neighborly service to !
families In general that It formerly
gave families of soldiers, sailors and
marines.
“Home Service covers a wide ami
varied field," says Frederick C. Mum
roe, general manager of the American
Red Cross. “It gives aid to families j
In solving such problems as budget j
planning, marketing, tiding over times ;
of financial stress, keeping children in
school, helping crippled children, wid
owed and deserted mothers, ehildren
backward In school and children • in
conflict with the laws. It renders serv
ice to the homeless and transient, to
the Illiterate, to tenement dwellers, to
the unemployed, and gives friendly as
sistance and advice to foreign speak
ing groups.”
In addition to helping families in
the solution of their own problems.
Home Service helps in strengthening
the weak spots In the social life of i
communities. It joins hands with nth- I
ers to make communities safer, '
healthier and happier.
Organizing. action along lines in
which the community Is already inter- !
ested Is one of the objects of Home I
Service. It has established community
meetings, patriotic celebrations, pag
eants and picnics. Rest rooms, recre
ation facilities, play supervisors and
moving pictures have been provided.*!
Through Home Service other agencies
are influenced to bring about improved
commercial amusements and better
school facilities and to promote travel
ing libraries as well as to secure coun
ty agricultural and home demonstra
tion agents.
If you need assistance at any time,
go to the secretary of the nearest Rod
Cross chapter and describe the situa
tion. Your confidence will he sacredly
respected and every possible effort will
be made to aid you.
SOME FACTORS OF SUCCESSFUL
' SMALL GRAIN PRODUCTION
j IN SOUTHERN STATES.
j C. A. Whittle, Southern Soil
{ Improvement Committee.
•d to hi
\ Here’s an i
i a
: Announcement I
\ i
■ of mighty meaning' to every ■
I Automobile Owner 1
Who Reads and Acts Upon It
An old adage “A Dollar Saved is a ■
Dollar /Hade.’’ having decided to dis= 5
continue the handling of Automobile ?
Casing, we have some' oT the following ■
d*
sizes at much reduced price as long as jjj
*1*
they last: . S
f
i
35x4 1-2 Plain Tread $39.40
34x4 “
“ 28.54
33x4
“ 27.75
31x4
“ 27.75
32x3 1=2 “
“ 19.80
30x3
“ 13.50
35x4 1=2 S
“ 44.25
34x4 “ 1
31.65
30x3 1=2 “
“ 20.00
1
Guaranteed for fully 6000 miles
See them before buying
Harding Supply Co.
Douglasville, Georgia
THE “0L0 RELIABLE”
THEiFORD’S BLACK-DRAUGHT
White Haired Alabama Lady Sayi She Ha* Seen Medicine* Come
and Go But The <; 01d Reliable” Thedford’* Black-Draujht
Came and Stayed.
Dutton, Ala.—In recommending Thed-
ford’s Black-Draught to her friends and
neighbors here, Mrs. T. F. Parks, a well-
known Jackson County lady, said: “I dm
getting up in years; my head is pretty
white. I have seen medicines and reme
dies come and go but the old re!’able
came and stayed. I am talking of Black-
Draught, a liver medicine we have t Ted
for years—one that can be depended up
on and one that will do the work.
“Black-Draught will relieve indigestion
and constipation if taken right, and I know
for I tried it It is the best thing I have
ever found for the full, uncomfortable
feeling after meals. Sour stomach and
sick headache can be relieved by taking
Black-Draught Jt aids digestion, also
ssists the liver in throwing off impuri
ties. 1 am glad to recommend Black-
Draught, and do, to my friends and
neighbors."
Thedford’s Black-Draught is a stand
ard household remedy with a record of
over seventy years of successful use.
Every one occasionally needs something
to help cleanse the system of imparities.
Try Black-Draught. Insist upon Thed
ford’s, the genuine.
At all druggists. g. 75)
• Wheat is too closely rol
(man hunger ever to su i-1 .1
plump in demand. At this iir.u» .1
great wheat producing arc.i of
tope give no signs of 'll - . : •>
jdiately back to normal p/odi ■ i
rviet Russia, the greatest of
(no signs of growing whe it • 1
even equal to—the needs <u’
; Roumania, Austria, Him
[Balkans tire so depleted .1 : 1
means, and so disturbed v i 1 v. 1
[international politics, its to
even enough small grain f >r 1
hungry and starving mill t • *
leading European countr
porters and not exporte- s
The Americas will, there
Lope of Europe’s bread.
Uenuuid will continue to 1
but.
LABOR—The labor r ,
Jier acre of wheat is loss. . ■
than for cultivated crops. > ; ; i
Lor’s scarce wheat and oats a • :
Core, to he looked upon With f. ■
But the labor problem invoh d in
producing wheat will not be cmnpioie-
Jy solved unless the farmer goes in for
large yields per acre. It requires no
piore preparation, and seed, to grow
n big crop of wheat than a small one.
.Therefore, the intelligent farmer will
look well to his soil treatment so that
maximum yields may he made at a
minimum cost per bushel. Farm labor
is too expensive to neglect this precau
tion.
PREPARATION—Wheat and Oats
do best on upland soils. The stiffer,
firmer soils are preferred. But it doey
not pay to sow these crops on eroded,
thin soiled slopes. If the crop ; -
iow cotton, (Torn j
crop, the soil nil
_ breaking Is not tie
T. (I 1) 14 ing iu the seed, the,
v v 11 and smoothed vrlt\\
! FERTILIZATION^
1 Ization will pay on 1
Fertilizers will creatj
velopmeut' and thus pTotect the plant
against winter-killing; they will hasten
the growth of wheat that lids been
sowu late 6u account of the Hessian
fly; it will increase stooling or tiller
ing, and make plumper grain and full
er heads; and well-fed plants are also
more resistant to rust and other dis
eases.
An application of nitrogen- in late
winter or early spring will.prove very
helpful in giving the grain crops a vig-,
orous new start.
GOOD SEED—A variety of wheat
may he good, but the germinating
power of the seed poor. A farmer ;
should give more attention to his !
wheat and oat seed. Ho should find j
out their yielding record. Different |
strains of a variety will have different |
yielding ability. Get only the best—
it pays.
Good seed includes clean seed. Make
them smut-free by u dip into blue
stone. Use only the varieties that have ;
rust resistance power. ,
Farmers of the cotton belt would do
well to go into the growing of cereals !
on a broader scale. Small grains fit j
in with a well arranged crop rotation, j
They provide necessities, and thereby!
add to the independence of the farm- j
er and to his power to conserve the re-!
turns from his money crops.
WftS
Sugar Is alopd-
carbon whicl
taken' into the
human body,
produces heat
and energy es
sential to life,
health and ac
tivity.
Overeducated.
“It was too much education that
landed me here, mum,” said the bur
glar to llie visitor at the penitentiary.
“1 had an assistant who was horn iu
Boston. One night we had a good
second-story job, hut he queered the
whole thing at the last minute.”
“How do you mean?" asked (he vis
it or.
“When T told him to climb up the
down spout to got the swag out of
the second -.lory he said: ‘I refuse to
do anything so paradoxical;’ and just
then the copper woke tip and collared
us."—Pit tshurgh Chronicle-Telegraph.
Sugar Is Nature’s Safe
Stimulant
You will find in our store all grades
of sugar for household use —from
dainty loaf for the tea table to heavy
brown for cooking. And our stock 1
of staple and fancy groceries is the
best obtainable. Consider our motto: j
Courtesy — Cleanliness — Honesty — Service
J. W. Townsend
Pay Your Subscription
The Most Closely Priced Fine Car
We Let You Know What
THe Chandler Price Is
T HE Chandler Motor Car Company, ever since the first Chandler
Car was built seven years ago, has, in every advertisement
issued to newspapers and magazines and all other forms of
publications, stated the list price of the Chandler Car.
It states it now and will continue to do so.
There is good reason for this and many thousands
of motor car owners know it. This: is the reason—
The Chandler Six is the most closely priced fine
car in the whole medium priced field.
Look through the pages of this paper or a
magazine that may be lying on your table. There
are probably from ten to twenty automobile
advertisements. How many name the price of
the car?
True, the cost of automobile production has
increased in the past year, and it is still increas
ing. But the Chandler Company, throughout
1919, with all its production greatly oversold,
held to its price.
The Chandler Six of . today is a highly per
fected development of the Chandler Six of seven
years ago, which started the trend toward light
weight sixes. All the engineering skill and
production efficiency at the command of the
Chandler Company has been devoted to this one
chassis and that fact is one of the reasons for
the Chandler’s leadership in its field today.
All Chandler bodies are mounted on the one standard Chandler chassis. Simple,
sturdy and dependable throughout,its features embrace, as for years past, the really
marvelous Chandler Motor, solid cast aluminum motor base, atmular ball bear
ings, silent chain drive for the auxiliary motor shafts, and Bosch magneto ignition.
Cars that May Compare with Chandler
are Listed at Hundreds of Dollars More
SIX BEAUTIFUL STYLES OF BODY
Seven-Passenger Touring Car, S1895 Four-Passenger Dispatch Car, SI975
Seven-Passenger Sedan, $2895 Four-Passenger Coupe, $2795
All Prices J. o. i>. Cleveland, Ohio
Four-Passenger Roadster, S1895
Limousine, S3395
F.M. WINN, Jr,, DEALER
CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO
Famous For Its Marvelous Motor