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THE UNION-HECOEDEE, MILLEDCEVILLE, GA., SEFTEMBEK 11, »»*»•
BCTfw OF FARM HAS
SHARPLY DECREASED
Eon.mi.l Fi««r». An,ov»t lor 1830
To *8,750,000.000 OeiRit* Recent
Regardless of the early appearance
of much needed rain in v*r:< u- agri
cultural localities farm income for
this year will he relatively dose to
*8.750,000.000, as .e*. niff red '$ith
slightly under SI0.5"".000 income
received during the last crop year,
according to a statement by Gage
P. Wright. New York business and
investment counselor '«nd head of
•‘The Business Economic Digest.”
“Farm inc ome for the current crop
ye:n will be lower than that receiv
ed luring any of the years .-ince
IS*21." said Mr. Wright. "This does
no? mean that farm purch;
will
slow
night
cated by these figuri
pun basing pow er »»f
lar has been in-.tv.
- .riy three years.
!
t.certain agricultural
■ -he draught will d« much to
,n unfavorable inventory aitu-
n the agricultural industry,
cent upward movement of
igriculturnl prices gives much
; the long down-
rd trend of general commodity
:es. which has been a most import-
unfavorable factor in the cur- \
t period of business depression.”
HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW?
Qucstimu: .
1. What is the Bayou state?
2. What is the meaning of the
proper nara 1 ', Alma?
How i» the name of the author
tlibran pronounced?
4. How much is the Peso of the
Philippine Islands worth?
5. Which is the rorect spelling,
tonsilitis or tonsillitis?
6. What portrait is on the 7c
7. What is a roc?
8. What are Blue laws?
I*. What is Dorothy D:x*s real
1!*. What month is the topaz the
birthswje for?
21. Who was the goddess that
sprang from the sea foam?
12. Who was the first king of
I.-rael?
Answers:
1. Mississippi.
2. Spirit, soul.
3. Zhee-bran with accent on
lust syllable.
4. Fifty cents.
5. The latter is correct.
6. McKinley
7. A mythical bird of Arabia,
large it carried off elephants for its
8. Laws which seek to regulate the
moral conduct of the people.
9. Elizabeth M. Gilmer.
11. Aphrodite.
12. Saul.
FOR RENT—Dow. stairs apMtsaaat
Furnished or aafaraished. Mrs.
David Fagesoa. 9-4-3# pd.
INDIGESTION SPELLS
ILi Says He Teek Math
Dru|b After Each Reel
•ad Sm Got Relief-
Mortb Charlotte. N. C.-In tdUnf
how he waa benefited by Thedford’a
Black-Draught. Mr. John M. Crepe,
of 903 Charles Avenue, this city,
writes:
“I had three spells of Indigestion,
one after another. I suffered a lot
of pain. My bock ached and I had
pains in my stomach frequently. It
“I waa bothered this way for about
a year. A friend whom l told about
my condition asked me to try Black-
Draught.
-I began by taking a pinch of
Black-Draught after each meal and
found that I soon got relief.
1 have been taking Black-
Draught for fourteen years, and I
find that it prevents headache and
constipation. Wc 1* *cp it in the
house all the time. I have told a
lot of people about it, and gladly
recommend it to ethers."
Many people have written that
they found relief from pains alter
eating by taking Black-Draught in
the manner described above.
Composed of selected medicinal
herbs and roots, finely powdered,
accurately combined and packaged
in a thoroughly modem, scientific
way. Price 2b(. NC-221
Detroit, Mich., Aug. 14.—Price
reductions of *40 on sport models
in the Chevrolet Six passenger car
line were unnounced here today by
H. J. Klingler, vice-president and
general sales manager of the Chev
rolet Motor Company.
The models affected arc the Sport
Roadster, which is now prieed at
*515; the Sport Coupe, reduced to
*615; the Club Sedan, now *625,
and the Special Sedan, *685. All
models formerly were priced *40
higher.
This latest move of the company
brings the price rang" of the Chev
rolet Six to less than the range of
the four cylinder Chevrolet at the
time of the change over at the close
of 1928. At that time the four was
priced from *495 to *715, while the
nine different passenger models in
the six cylinder line today range
from *495 to only *6h. r ;, following
this latest reduction.
The move of the company comes
directly after the announcement that
wire wheels may now be hod as op
tional equipment without extra cost
on any Chevrolet Six passenger car.
NOTICE!
I have moved my Second
Hand Clothing Store to the
Elks Building
Next to Postal Telegraph
CENTRAL PRESIDENT GIVE?.
REASONS FOR PUBLIC
PATRONAGE
Under the heading “Why Patron
ize the Railroads”, President A. E.
Clift of the Central of Georgia
in a statement published today gives
some of the reasons why the rail
roads ask for public support. The
quality of their service is generally
recognired, according tr. Mr. Clift,'
and the railroads offer shippers and
tuavelcrs dependability combined J
with promptness safety, comfort
and moderate prices.
Discussing other reasons for pub
lic support for the railroads, Mr.
Clift wys:
“The railroads are large taxpay
ers and help bear the expense of
schools and government. They are
large employers of labor, and their
payrolls put money into circulation
in every community that has schools
and government. They .are large
employers of labor, and their pay
rolls put money into circulation in
every community that has railroad
service. They are large purchasers
of equipment, material and supplies. i
They co-operate in the building and
development of industry and agri
culture.
“In any emergency the railroads
jkre called upon far extraordinary j
action. At, for example, unusual
service and .a 50 per cent reduc-;
tion of rates on livestock and feed j
is the contribution of the railroads
to save the drouth-stricken territory {
from disaster.”
Mr. Clift closes with the state- j
ment that no other means of trans- J
portation can equal ihe railroads in\
^<4)-around usefulness. > '‘The rail-j
are an asset to the country!
and the people,” he says, “an as-|
set which should be guarded and j
built up by patronage and a sym
pathetic public interest in their wel
fare."
HATS, SHOES AND
CLOTHING of all kinds
EVERYTHING DIRT CHEAP
The Bargain Store
REID MATHIS, Mgr
Three wise men of Gochana
Went to tea in a bowl;
And they took greet
treasures with them,
Better than silver and gokL
Cake* and biscuits and
goodies.
To last them for many
an hour,
Rolls and the choicest
Made with Omega Hoar 1
A. J. CARR COMPANY
Wholesale^ Distributors
A New 6-cylinder
Chevrolet Truck
WITH DUAL WHEELS
A new fix-cylinder Hi-ton Chevrolet truck—with
dual wheels—is now available at Chevrolet
dealers everywhere. It is big and powerful, rugged
and dependable. It offers many new features of
outstanding value to the modern truck user. And
no other truck of equal capacity costs lass to
operate and maintain. Your nearest Chevrolet
dealer will gladly give you a trial load demon
stration—any time.
IMPORTANT FEATURES
Dual wheels at slight additional cost, with six
truck-typo cord tiros —bigger, heavier rear axle
—completely enclosed four-wheel brakes—new
heavy-duty truck-type clutch — new, stronger steel
channel frame—4-speed transmission—50-horse-
powar valve-in-head six-cylinder engine.
CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICH.
Division ol Gon.rol MMnr. Corpom’lon
CHOOSE
JUST :
— erode
IFt Mm 20Mi Anniversary of
Mm World's First Cord Tiro!
20 yean ago, Goodrich
1 produced the first coed tire ever
send-—and named k Silvertown!
Now, Silvertowa gives you
cause to celebrate. Foe the Ssher-
SDwua we’re showily you now go
farther and cost In* than any
SUvrrtown ever did. Cane in!
Sec StKertowna as they are now
node! And celebrate by slipping
case or more oo your car.
CELEBRATE WITH
SILVERTOWNS!
29x4:50
- $7.90
30x4:50
- $8.00
29x4:40
- $7.25
28x4;75
- $8.75
Goodrich Silver towns
L. D. SMITH