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Arthur Brisbane »
COW MILKING TABLE.
STAND OR RUN YOU'RE SHOT.
AN OFFER FOR COOLIDGE.
WHY NOT LINDBERG?
th<
Farmers will be interested
“fifty cow milking; table." The in
formation comes from l)r. J. H. Mc
Neil, Chief of the New Jersey Bureau
of Animal Industry. The milking
table is devised by the Walker Gor
don Company’s New Jersey inilk
farm.
It is a beginning of industrial
methods applied to milk production.
A huge table like a small “round
house" with fifty absolutely clean
cow stalls on it, is made to revolve
slowly. The cows walk on and off,
while the table is in motion, and
soon get used to the new idea.
THETOWNDOCTOR
(The Doctor af Towaa)
Mice still stick their heads into |
rhecse traps; flies still swarm atop j
poisoned honey; moth., still fly into
the candle flame; bumblle bees still
swarm to a bussing jug; sheep still
follow the leader over a cliff; a sal-
mop fish still swims up the river.
They Never leam anything no mat
ter how many examples, how many
:xpcricnteg of their fellows,—they
eo on doing the same thing in the
• ime way,‘generation after genera
tion—and die.
A town that doesn't learn and pro
make your community m better, more
attractive, more interesting place in
which to live, work, play and make
money.
It’s a man to man proposition: Is
there any real reason why you
shouldn't get behind and push?
This Town Doctor Article, one of
a series of fifty-two is published by
the Union Reorder in co-operation
with the Milledgeville Lions Club.
EXCURSIONS TO SAVANNAH
ACCOUNT
WORMSLOE GARDENS
March 29-30. April 5-« Tickets
United Fie* Day*
WORMSLOE, the beautiful his-
ric gardens of the DeRenne family,
>ar Savannah, now open to the pub-
This famous estate granted by
•orge II to Colonel Noble Jones and
miming through the years
the experiences of other ' hands of his descendants. Sight-see-
town- will go the same way as the] ing bus leaves Savannah and DeSoio
mouse, the fly, the moth, the bee, | Hotels for Wormsloe Garden 10:00
and the “poor fish.” Because they j A. M. and 3:00 P. M.
do n«.t learn from experinece is rea-1 Round Trip Excursion Fare from
son for 91 towns in one state alone [ Milledgeville $6.50.
to pass out of existence in a ten-year Excursion Fare* on Other Dat<
period—in average of one to a coun- Longer Limit
ty for some states. Such towns are Fare and one half round trip from
in a rut—and the only difference ull stations in Alabama and Georgia
and the grave
depth.
Who doesn't know that to stand
still is getting nowhere? In nature
in business—in every human en-
deavcp—to cease to grow is to perish
- one way or another.
Bruce Barton siys, “When we quit
7aml 7a'| hanging we arc through."
To each cow an electrical milking
device is attached .is i enters its
stall. At the end of one complete
table turning,- the cow, milked and
"stripped,” walks off the table at
the spot where it walked —
immediately led. i Tbt ’ "“ nB " tht “ '‘ i " P“> - thc K™ 1 -
Feed year cow, after milk-If*
injr. Feeding: before milking taint,
the milk. Cows like the milk mass
production idei, the relief of milk-
citizens
ing, followed by tlie
eating, makes a plea-
quit thinking thut
vn h something that will
of itself, or that the mayor
'pleasure iof I ,bt ' ot tl>e “ !rvicl! c,ubs “ n,i
combina-
The Walker Gordon Comp
milking fifteen hundred cows in
of its stables, can use several tables.
Farmers may take their cowi
co-operative milking lines, like the
production line in an automobile
factory. Workmen will stand still,
cow* slowly passing them, one
cleaning them free of dus*. by vacuum
cleaner, made by Mr. Wooley of the
American Radiuor Company.
organizations
to be done.
yuor part to think
community—refusal to
attitude from passive
COSTING you money,
few others, by changing
March 23, 26, 27, 28, 29, April 2, 5;
limited seven days.
For further particulars and travel
information Ask the Ticket Agent.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
The Right Way
BATTERY SERVICE
Sir Ree Bob, that i* oui
me. Call 392 or 313.
L. N. JORDAN
OUR SERVICE IS SUDDEN
Our prices are the lowest—What
more do you want?
High class Shoe Repairing,
Cleaning and Pressing
RUIN’S SHOE PUNT AND
PRESSING CLUB
Phone 373
Another man would wash the cows*
udders, another apply the milking
machinery, another meet the milk
ed cow, walking off the line to her
dinner.
Such a plan, taking the cow to the
man, would put milk farming on a
modern industrial basis. The aver
age milk farmer would like to get
thirty cent* a quart for his milk, as
Walker Gordon docs, instead of
$1.80 for 100 pounds of milk, but
that is another problem.
In these days of widespread crime
it is difficult to know whether to
stand still or run.
Henry Lsgowitx, seventeen, innoc
ent of evil, coming out of his aunt’s
house, saw a “plain clothes” detec
tive who for some reason didn't like
his looks and told him to stop.
He thought it was a highwayman,
and ran. On general principles, the
detective shot him. He will recover.
On the high road a man raises
his hand, orders a driver to stop.
The driver his two guesses. He may
b% stopped by a highwayman, intent
on robbing him, or by a virtuous pro
hibition enforcement officer, investi
gating.
The wise thing is to stop and
your life, for in either case yoi
the risk of being shot.
Mr. Mills, able advertising
wishes you to know that he has off
ered President Coolidge $76,000 a
year for four years, to act is general
director ut a home-furnishing
ment.
Prsident Coolidge has bigger off
ers. Why not offer the homefurnish-
ing job to Colonel Lindbergh, whose
mind just now is probably
trated on that very subject.
Nearly 100 . __
Nathan Cob- founded the
pi nnrrr milling coi
which bear. hi.
A. J. Carr Company
THE ESSEX
Challenger
challenges them all
in speed, power, quick getaway
and economy of operation.
Sec this new car and enjoy riding in the full comfortable bodies—learn the
pleasure of the New Cltalienger.
It has taken the country by storm and has lived up to all the boosts we make
for it.
Baldwin people too have quickly learned what tremendous advancement the
new Hudson and Essex have made in the auto field.
There is nothing else on the road like them—Nothing to compare in beauty—
Speed—Power—and comfortable—Easy riding.
We stand back of every statement made and invite your inspection. We have
already sold six of these new cars and you too can join the Hudson-Essex owner
class and there will never be a regret.
See the New Models now on Display—14 New Hudson Bo<^r Types—7 New
Essex.
LOOK AT HIE PRICES
Essex
‘895 - *1095
Delivery Fully Equipped At Your Door
Hudson
*1095 “ *2295
Fully Equipped At Your Door
T. H. ENNIS
Hudson-Essex
.