Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
PARENTS OF DEAF CHIL
: DREN, TAKE NOTICE
~ The Georgia School for the Deaf
at Cave Spring will open its doors
.%o our deaf children on Wednesday,
September 10th. Every deaf child in
Georgia between the ages of 7 and
25 years has the right to the educa
tion there offered and he should get
jt. If the child's parents cannot pro
vide the railroad fare and clothing
a letter to the principal, Mr. J. C.
hu’ris, enclosing a certificate from
the ordinary, will obtain money for
these purposes. The advantages of
the school are free to all.
The Georgia School for the Deaf
is a part of the educational system
provided by Georgia for her children,
a system which proposes to give equal
opportunity to all. Our deaf children
are there taught to speak, to inter
pret the lip movements of others into
words, to read the printed page, and
to write their thoughts in good Eng
lish sentences. They are trained to
habits of neatness and politeness.
They are trained to expertness in ‘
some useful occupation by daily work
on farm or in wood shop or print
shop or machine shop. They are ed
ucated to be happy and useful and
intelligent citizens.
HIGHLANDS
We all feel that God has blessed us
in so many ways and that He was
with us the past week at New Salem;
we feel His blessings more every day
and are truly thankful for the souls
He saved last week. There were 32
new members in the church. Five by
letter—Mr. and Mrs: Walker Steph
ens, Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Redd and Miss
Sarah Fletcher. By experience —
Misses Odessa Darby, Myrtle Cook,
Eva Norton, Anna Chatham, Idelle
Adair, Gladys Orr, Florence Frasure,
Rosa Lee Kirk, Jimmie Lee Loftus,
and Grace Newton; Mrs. Lou Ella
Leavett, and Messrs. Amos Cox, Fred
Darby, Guy and Hubert Elrod, Pink
Green, Alvin, John and Elbert Foster,
Willie Satterfield, Robert Byrd, G. R.
Runyan, Frank Sewell, and Carl Ed
wards, Fleet R. Kirk and two children,
Adrian and Katherine.
We all wish to thank Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Leavell for their kindness' in
having two dressing rooms fixed up
for our boys and girls to go to from
the creek, which was in their pasture.
We know that was trouble and we
know good Christian people they are.
Miss Lucile Lewis spent last week
with her mother, Mrs. G. R. Lewis at
‘Mrs. W. P. Hardage’s.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hudson, of At
lanta, spent a few days last week with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hard
age.
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Hardage, Mr.
R. E. Hardage, Miss L. E. Hardage,
afd Mr. Robert McMullin spent Tues
day in Douglas county with their sis
ter, Mrs. H. A. Pames who is very
sick.
Mrs. Frank Flynn, of Kennesaw,
spent last Friday with Miss Ruby
Ridgeway.
Miss Lucile McCollum, of Pine Mt.
visited Miss Ora Bearden Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Asberry Martin, of
Cartersville, have returned home after
spending a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Mac Martin.
Mrs. Gordon Keeling and children
from Riverside, are spending some
time with her sister, Mrs. W. P.
Bearden. ’
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bearden had as
their guests Sunday Messrs. Henry
Hawkins and Clinton Hogins, of Can
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. Griggs, Mrs. Jim Cantrell
and three children, of Lost Mountain.
Mr. Luther Benson, and family, of
Marietta, spent Sunday with Mr. J.
W. Edwards and family.
Mr. Dan Moss, of Atlanta, came up
in his car Sunday to see Mr. W. P.
Hardage and Misses Lucile and Jauni
ta Lewis returned with him.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rutledge and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moore
and family, of Villa Rica, visited Mr.
J. D. Carnes and family last week.
Mr. Willie Saterfield visited his
brother, Mr. Sam Saterfield, at Rose
Lane, recently.
Mr. R. E. Hardage, of Austell, who
has been visiting relatives here re
turned home Wednesday.
Mr. R. E. Hardage, of Austell, Mr.
‘and Mrs. J. N. Hardage, Mr. B. Mec-
Mullin, and two sisters, of Largo, Fla.
‘Miss Laura Low, of Amo, Fla., Mr.
‘and Mrs. C. C. Hudson, and two
children, Misses Lucile and Jaunita
Lewis, and Mr. Dan Moss, of Atlanta,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mohon, Mr.
‘and Mrs. H. R. Ridgeway and daugh
ter, Ruby, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Carns,
%lr. Asa Darby, Mr. and Mrs. 1. A.
‘Darby and six children, Mr. and Mrs.
C. C. James and five children, Mr. and
Mrs. C. S. Kirk and four children,
. and Mrs. F. R. Kirk and two child-
L s, G. R. Lewis, Miss L. E.
Hardage, Messrs. Luther James and
ugh Leavell and Rev. George Crow
were the guests of Mr. and Mrs W.
e.
~ The stork visited Mr. and Mrs. W.
. Bearden, Saturday, August 9, and
! a nice little girl.
i Mr.J. W. Edwards and family and
fiu Ora Bearden attended the Phil
lips Legion reunion Wednesday.
1 5 —Muggins.
OUTLOOK FOR THE NEXT WHEAT AND OAT CROP
The approach of wheat and oat suw
ing time rajses a question in the farm
ers mind as to the outlook for these
crops. It is well known that under
the stimulus of Government price an
enormous wheat crop has »een pro
duced, & crop of approximately 1,200,
000,000 bushbels.
It 18 estimated that this country re
quires 600,000,000 bushels and that
‘Europe will require from 410,000,000“
to 460,000,000 bushels. If these figures
prove correct, there will be a very lit
tle surplus left of the big crop of
wheat this country has grown. ‘
Since it appears to be probable thatj
there will be no trouble to dispose of
the present crop the next question is,
what are the planting prospects for
other wheat growing nations?
Of course the natione south of the
equataor, like Argentina and Austra
lia, that have their summer when we
are having our winter, have already
sown their fall crops, and will har
vest them near Christmas time. These
nations have, thus far, good prospects;
but they would hardly compare with
any two leading wheat-growing states
of this country; therefore, they are
not important factors.
Russia is the great granary of Eu
gope and Asia. Those who have watch
ed the political trend of that country
see nothing but war and paralyzed
agriculture ahead another year, if not
for several years.
. WHAT IS ACID PHOSPHATE?
Raw phosphate rock is a substance
fn which phosphoric acid and lime are
combined together in practically the
same proportions in which they are
found in bone, and which is known
as phosphate of lime.
In this condition the lime and the
phosphoric acid hold to each other
with such a tight grip that the phos
phorus cannot be dissolved by wa
ter. It will readily be seen that but
for such a combination the phospho
rus would have been dissolved out and
washed to the sea Lefore ever man
came to inhabit the earth, But ft
has been locked up and held for us in
this way, just as the coal has been
HIGHWAY COMMISSIONERS
NAMED BY GOVERNOR
Governor Dorsey has announced
the members of the new state high
way commission appointed by him in
pursuance of the highway commission
law passed by the legislature at the
session just adjourned. They are as
follows:
' From north Georgia, Prof. Charles
M. Strahan, head of the department
of civil engineering at the University
of Georgia, and a member of the ad
interim highway committee that drew
the highway bills. He is appointed to
théstwo-year term and will by virtue
g%ltw chi act provides, be
alrMaßSal tHe commission.
From middle Georgia, Samuel
Yates Austin, of LaGrange, a very
prominent young business man con
: ; 3
2. () f/ 64 AT
, WAGONS BUGGIES HARNESS
™ A TRUE STORY ABOUT \‘l@ .h,/? N
A STUDEBAKER |Ly ‘ /
Bo you remember the Studebaker : 5 o\ g 21/ W <
e it \ (1)~
e e ‘. e
'Km?m5........ '::"\.‘s!\“'?: \ et =
SSEDIHEET i
capable of being wed fr mesr 36 yearold Studebaker
yeoars to come. .
BwMcdewiio. hauling ore over
e TIOUNLAINS
Even the tires have never been reset.
— and it has never been under shelter.
It doesn’t make any difference what you
haul — what you want is a wagon ready to |
do its part of the work.
That’s the kind of wagon service you get |
when you have a Studebaker.
We continue to sell Studebaker Wagons
because we know how they are built and §
what kind of service they are giving men |
who have bought them from us. ,
For sale_ by |
BUSBEESHARDWARE AND- |
Marietta SUPPLY CO. Georgia
European countries in general are
short of labor. Demobilization of
armies progresses slowly and the De
rtod for fall sowing of small grain
in Europe will have passed before any
material change can be made through
recovery of labor from the armies.
Therefore, there is going to be a
continued shortage of small grain in
Europe, making it probably necessary
for this country to supply as much
rgrain next year as this.
' But instead of the nation maintain
ing its wheat acreage, it is fear
ed the withdrawal of the Government’s
guarantee will result in a reduction.
~ In the South it is not only a good
farm practice to grow wheat, oats and
rye enough for home needs, but it is
very desirable, (1) to have winter
cover crops that will take up ghe
plant food that would otherwise wash
out of the soil with the winter rains;
(2) to provide light winter grazing for
livestock; (3) to furnish in early
spring some fresh cereal bay which
will be the better if it has vetch or
bur clover gybéwing with it; (4) to
furnish vegetable matter or humus to
turn into the soil at the spring plow
ing.
If all the cotton and corn fields
were sown to small grain in the fall,
it would mean more cotton and corn,
better soil, larger returns from fer
tilizers and greater farm profits.
Too little attention is given to ob
taining good wheat, oats and rye seed;
too little attention is given to pre
paring a good seed bed, and too little
fertilizers are used in growing the
small grain crops in the South. What
is worth doing at all, is worth domf
well. ‘
held under the hills, and in the case
of the phosphorus we have been given
the key for its unlocking by the use
of sulphuric acid, which converts the
insoluble rock into a soluble form.
If the soluble phosphoric acid were
separated from the lime which car
ries it and dissolved in water it would
be much more inconvenient to handle
than to leave it still combined with
lime in the dry powder which we call
acid phosphate, this lime simply serv
ing the function of a bottle to carry
the phosphorus, and saving the much
larger expense that would be involw
ed in the complete extraction of the
phosphoric acid, converting it into
liquid form and providing bottles fin
which to carry it—Monthly Bulletio
Ohio Experiment Station. -
nected with the Fuller E. Callaway
industries in that city. He is ap
pointed to the six-year term.
From south Georgia, Stanley Ben
nett, prominent lawyer of the city
of Quitman, in Brooks county.
As attorney to the commission the
governor appointed H. J. Quincey, of
Ocilla, in Irwin county. The act
requires the attorney to give his en
tire time to his duties. He is paid a
salary of $4,200 a year.
BIGGEST WHEAT CROP
MADE IN NORTHWEST
The Pacific northwest will harvest
more than 80,000,000 bushels of
wheat this year, according to careful
ly compiled estimates given out Wed
nesday. This is an increase of 25,-
000,000 bushels over last year and
the greatest crop Oregon, Idaho and
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL =
W' ashington have ever collectively
grown and gathered.
The nearest these states have ever
come to such a heavy yield was four
_years 2ago when the yield reached
approximately 78,000,000 bushels.
And yet in the face of all this sur
plus, food has® been steadily going
up.
STATE PRINTER APPOINTED
To the position of superintendent
of state printing, created by the leg
islature at this session, Governor Dor
sey appointed Claude M. Methvin,
editor of the Times-Journal of East
man, in Dodge county. He is a for
mer member of the house from that
county and was chairman of the print
ing committee of the house. He is
a former president of the Georgia
Weekly Press Association and is well
known and highly regarded through
out the state.
ATLANTA RAIL STRIKE
The strike of the railway shop
men came to an end in Atlanta on
Thursday when the strikers returned
‘to their places of work.
i In acceding to the request of Pres
jdent Wilson to return to work, the
'men believe they will get a square
‘deal according to their statements.
Much work is ahead of the work
men in the shops of the various lines
entering Atlanta. The condition of
rolling stock in many instances is
bad and the round houses are filled
with locomotives that need repairs.
SUBMARINE IS NC
LONGER A MENACE
New York, Aug. 11.—Michael L.
Pupin, professor of electro-mechan
ics at Columbia University, has re
turned from a four-months’ visit to
the Balkan States. He said that the
perfection of French and American
inventions since the war will elimi
nate the submarine as a war weapon
in the future. He would not describe
the inventions.
In Serbia there is plenty of food
but no clothing, and thousands in
Serbia and Montenegro are dying “dai
ly from sickness, he added. Tuber
culosis is the worst scourge. There
are so many orphans that there is
need for Americans to adopt them,
not by having the children brought
here, but by giving 400 francs a year
for their upkeep.
Major W. M. Chadbourne of 165
Broadway, a member of the Ameri
can Board of Liquidation which is dis
posing of surplus stores in Europe,
denied that American aeroplanes and
automobiles have been destroyed in
France. He said that everything of
any value was salvaged. |
: Announcement of
Busbee Hardware and Supply Company
Dobbs Old Stand—West Side Park Square
We solicit your patronage. We know we can save you
money if you will get our prices before buying. We are here to
do business with you. We have a complete line of Hardware on
hand or on the road to us. , -
Wagons— " .
If you want Wagons we have a car load of Studebaker’s,
one and two horse. o
Stoves— :
‘We have the best Range Stoves ever made. Also Oil
Stoves, Glassware, Crockery, Tinware, etc. | |
Plumbing— " |
Now about our Plumbing, we will be ready within 10 days to
do all kinds of Plumbing work. We have just secured the servi
ces of a first-class Plumber and will guarantee satisfaction.
The Busbee Hardware and
Supply Company
T. P. BUSBEE, Mgr. : '
Builders’ Supplies :: Hardware : Stoves :: Ranges
MARIETTA ‘ 'GEORGIA
Do you believe in protection against loss
of your savings for years? Fire insurance
is the best protection known.
We can protect you anywhere in Cobb
county and will gladly call on you at any/
time to inspect your property and quote
you your rate free of charge.
Telephone 134 ,
Office in the Reynolds Building with Holland Realty Company
JOE DOBBINS
TRANSFER
. and
STORAGE
We Move YEH. Anywhere
Picnic Parties A Specialty
Telephone 272
s N
BLACK BUILDERS SUPPLY GOMPANY
OFFICE PHONE 204 .
——DEALERS IN —
. Rough and dressed lumber, shingles, laths, lime,
cement, plaster, brick and Pattons Sunproof Paint
We carry the most complete and largest stock of
building material in North Georgia.
Your orders, large or small, appreciated. We
can give you lowest prices and prompt deliveries.
Mill and Office, Church St., in front of car barn.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1919