The Rockdale record. (Conyers, Ga.) 1928-1930, June 19, 1929, Image 7

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IrVi;St)AV^tNEl rV i;St)AV^ tNE l9 ’ 1939 JTvWOOD is credited with PLEASING FASHIONS pr n /; J i CSoW'*\ / | %* E*3SS.j/ m ■iSHIONS that interest the motion ■picture stars of Hollywood natural interest the majority of the younger Lricaa women, since the “movie" Eple must really be ahead of the Emises of the fashion plates, thus Klast word in advance styles should ■ expected from them. A popular ■llywood model is shown in the pic- L In this design the wood-violet lades are chosen for the handsome ■nmer ensemble which shows a piece lit coat with blocks of different col ad silks richly embroidered. The rt is knife plaited and shows these me patterns while the overblouse Is plain white silk with scarf treat nt Beige slippers and hose com ite the costume. Everything is remarkably straight this model, which is unusual Ibis tsen, when almost every dress and Georgia Railroad (Stone Mountain Houle) TRAVEL BY TRAIN., RAIN OR SHINE CONYERS READ DC T> l4 4 8 2|| Schedule | 1 | 7 | 13 . 1 pm pm am |j May 1, 1929 | pm pm |am l 4,1 40 (, 0 325 700 ||Lv Athintit Ar 145 030 840 l ’’** 40 18 343 720|| “ Decatur ” 120 (i 15 820 i ,JW f3 50 f7 25 ||“ Scottdhle ” £ll6 £6 10 810 144l 44 £3 54 £7 29 ||“ Clarkston ’’ fill £6 06 810 ‘ r '“ 404 739 ||“ Stone Mt. ”|| 102 558 '8 00 . 02 £4 12 £7 48 ||“ Redan . ”|j£l2 53 £5 49 748 o 1(1 20 7 s(> ||“ Litlioni:i. v 12 45 545 738 fs 10 56 430 807 11“ Conyers ” 12 35 533 727 *1 f8 18 ||'“ Almon (£l2 24 __l £7 12 f ' r _ 11 44 450 830 ||“ Covington ”|| 12 12 515 705 ' 9 ’j‘ £5 05 |£B 40 ||“ Aleovy ”||f.Ul 03 fO 00 £6 55 -LlV 11 35 r > 14 I 852 ||“ Social Cl-. ”|| 11 54 455 645 (EASTERN TIME) YOU OWE IT TO YOUR FAMILY — TRAVEL BY TRAIN j p Traffic Department 14.( i*s, General Passenger Agent Atlanta, Ga. Ilf l (tip weekly excursion tickets on sale daily at 1 1-2 regular fares—Good for 5 days. 'Veek-end Tickets at 1 1-3 Regular Fare. THROUGH CAR SERVICE j No <> Local Sleeping Car Between ‘ ATLANTA AND AUGUSTA No. 4 V ,AN SLEEPING car and parlor service coat stresses unevenness. The hem line is decidedly even, also the bottom of the blouse, which is in a straight line from shoulder to the hem. A belt of black patent leather with a dainty buckle is worn at the hips. The front facing on the coat shows an embroid ered effect. The sleeves are perfectly plain as to style. In all it is a sports outfit beyond compare, and it. is not surprising that it is favored by Holly wood. American women, with their de mand for color, are credited by Paris with maintaining the vogue of gay printed materials, and also, they are Held responsible for the printed two piece suits winch constitute a notice able part of the midsummer collec tions shown in Paris. French women find; the two-piece printed costumes too flashy for town wear, and are more favorable to ensembles of plain color—-black and white being pre ferred. Despite their attitude, the printed suits are a well-established note of the midsummer chic and are branded as tlie latest style by the woman who is careful about her ward robe. Prominent among the foundation colors used for tlie prints of the sea son are brown, Dine, black, red. The majority of the patterns are small. Many have conventional floral designs, mostly in petal and leaf effects. Thus practically all tastes can bo satisfied; JULIA BOTTOMLEY. (©, 1929, Western Newspaper Unton.) THE ROCKDALE RECORD. CONYERS. GEORGIA W % t Top Dress Cotton Now It does not cost any more to fight boll weevils and cultivate cotton that will yield a good crop than it does poor cotton. To get the most out of your expense of cultivating and poi soning you must get per acre yield. The way to increase your per acre yield is to do these three things now Cultivate —top Dress—-Poison. As our cotton is late anyway, now is the time to shoot that top dressing to it. (Jive the little cotton a shove and get it to fruiting as soon and as rapidly as possible. A hundred pounds of soda or sulphate per acre now will make your cotton “gel a hump on in a hurry’’ and if you will then keep the grass and weevils out you can ex peel to make cotton. Let’s do tHiss and make something. We can do this. How About Feed? Now is tlie time to sow hay. Plant <> too tan soy beans now. A bushel will plant six acres. They should have a little acid phosphate or other fertiliz er under them. An acre should make you one to two tons of hay, and this will lie mighty good feed, made mighty cheap. They can he easily cultivated by draging a drag liarro waeross the rows a couple of times after they get six inches high, and until they are about a foot high. Prepare ground as you would for cow peas. Alfalfa —Our Best Crop Mr. H. (’. Moon and Mr. Sant Mitch am will be cutting their alfalfa hay the Second time this week. They got about a ton and a half per acre tlie first cutting and it is better this time than it was tlie first cutting. This three tons of alfalfa is now worth one hundred and thirty-five dollars, as the wholesale price is forty-five dollars ]K>r ton. They will gel two more cat lings after this one. This crop was sowed last fall and will return them over two hundred dollars worth of hay per acre the first year. What crop will beat it.'There is always a market for alfalfa hay if you make more than you need for your own is the time to sow peas where alfalfa is to tie sowed this fall. Sow two bushels per acre so it will he thick enough to keep the grass choked out. Select good, well drained soil for tUis crop, with a clay subsoil. You should have-an- alfalfa patch. Bean Beetles For bean beetles mix, a pound of calcium arsenate with seven to ten pounds of lime or flour, and get as mu ll of this as possible on the under side of the leaves. This same stuff will also kill Irish potato hugs, and other garden insects that cln w leaves. For plant lice use nieotene sulphate, which you will find at the drug store. More Five Acre Cotton Contestants Wanted We only have until the first of July to join the five acre cotton contest. We should have more members than we have to date. If you want to know how much it costs you to make a pound of cotton, or if you want to learn more about how to produce a pound of cotton cheaper, let me have your name and I will give you a rec ord book and help you find out these things for yourself. You do not have to have a garden spot of land to do this. If you take land nearer like the most of your farm is, it will likely lie worth more to you, as you will lie able to use the methods on a larger scale next year if you find this a better way. This is the purpose of the five acre contest. Watch the fellows who were in the contest last year in this county make more cotton per acre on their farm than they-did last year, At any rate many of them have started out this way. .They have learn ed the lesson tor which the contest was started —that to make cheaper cotton we must make more cotton per acre, and what it costs to make cot ■pn this way. That Boy of Yours We need your hoy in the hoys’ club work. It will give him an inspiration and make a better farmer and a bet ter man of him. Talk it over with him. Give him a patch, or a pig, or a calf, and let him be getting training to tie a better farmer than his daddy ever was. I shall he g’lad to cooperate with him and you in this. Yours for trying harder for better things, ERNEST I). HOLMES, County Agent. LEGALS GEORGIA, Rockdale County. To All Whom It May Concern: W. L. King, a resident of this State, having in due form applied to the undersigned • for the guardianship of the projierty of Miss Gredelle Jones, of said County, a Lunatic now confin ed in the Georgia State Sanitarium at Milledgeville, notice is hereby given that said application will be heard at the next Court of Ordinary for said County on tlie first Monday In July, 1929. Witness my hand and official signa ture this 4th day of June, 1929. THUS. H. MAUSTON, Ordinary Rockdale County. LETTERS OF ADM IN fcSTR \TION GEORGIA, Rockdale County. Ordinary’s office, June 2, 1929. Dr'. J. A. Bell lias applied for let ters of Administration on the estate of J. ('. Waldrop, deceased. This is therefore, to notify all persons con cerned, that tin* same will In* heard on the first Monday in July next. THUS. 11. MAUSTON. Ordinary. TWELVE MONTHS’ SUPPORT GEORGIA, Rockdale County: Court of Ordinary of said county at Chambers, June 6th, HUM. Tlie ap praisers appointed upon tlie applica tion of Mrs. Lena B. Alexander, widow of Howard L. Alexander, deceased, for a Twelve Months' Support for her self having filed their returns, all per sons concerned are hereby cited to show cause, if any tHey have, at tlie next term of the Court of Ordinary of said county why said application should not be granted as prayed for. TUGS. H. MAHSTON, Ordinary. TAX SALE GEORGIA, Rockdale County. Will lie sold before the Court House door in the city of Conyers, said state and county between the legal hours of sale, to highest bidder, for cash, on the first Tuesday in July, 1929 the fol lowing described projierty, to-wit: All that tract of land lying, situate and being in City of Conyers, in Rock dale County containing one house and lot and bounded as follows: On the west by City Waterworks; on the north by S. J. Kelly; on tlie south by Macedonia church and W. U. Wallace; on Hie east by Barton Allen. Said property levied on as the prop erty of Mary Horton to satisfy tax ex ecution issued by E. E. Owen, T. C„ for unpaid state and county taxes for years 1926 and 1927. J. F. COOK, Sheriff. iy '■ I Mrs. 'Georgia Hale lias as her guests (this week her daughter, Mrs. H. M. Copeland, and children Evelyn and William, of liockmart, Ga. Refrigeration \ DOCTORS and dieticians advise plenty of milk for youngsters —and for oldsters, too for milk is nature’s perfect food for humans. Don’t forget, though, that milk to be beneficial instead of harmful, must be protected by adequate refrigeration modern refrigeration. A General Electric Refrigerator, in other words. With it in your kitchen you need never worry. Milk will keep without danger of “turning” or con- DOWN 30 Ttlonthf topayL GENERAL ELECTRIC Refrigerator Georgia Power Company . - A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE - - PERMANENT WAVES Miffimk Supreme in Quality and Beauty yWjj Can be had by ef- rft* Wr ficient, capable T1.i.l II I \ L operators for . . ’’7 Every wave lias curly or ringlet end V. 1 and will last permanently. Styles to 1 \ suit your individuality. Evening Appointments Ryckeley’s Wave Shop 1-4(5 Peachtree St., N. K. Phone IVy 8987 for Appointment. ATLANTA, GA. Buy your new Ford at the home of ; { good service A j y \ V-:' WE HAVE been selling Ford cars for a great many years and we have installed every modern facility for giving you good service. Our mechanics have been specially trained to service the new Ford car. Our new precision service equipment duplicates factory manu facturing methods. You will find that it pays to buy your car at The Home of Good Service. Roadiler, £450 Phaeton, £460 Tudor Sedan, £525 Butinett Coupe, £495 Coupe, £550 Sport Coupe, with rumble teal, £550 Fordor Sedan, £625 \ Iff (Alt ptiett f. O. B, Detroit) j % (i) V I Langford Motor Cos. * Conyers, Ga. m * O. S. IS tarnination in the hottest weather. The temperature inside your General Electric Refrigerator never rises above the safety degree where bacterial growth is checked. As with milk, so with other foods. You need this protection. You can have it now without wait ing. Our liberal special terms make this possible for you and everyone else. But—prompt action is necessary, for these terms are for the period of this special sale 0n1y... and the sale will soon be over. So act now —without de lay. Come in and get the facts. There are a host of interesting details about the General Electric Re frigerator which you should know.