Pearson tribune. (Pearson, Ga.) 191?-1955, September 20, 1918, Image 4
CHURChUM RECTORY. P£A»?SQN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH. Cider 3. O..WILLIAMS, Pastor Pt-eachliiE <:* f ry third Sunday at 11 o’clock a. in. and 7 o’clock l>. in. Sunday-School every Sunday at 3 o'clock (i. in. Will rn, Superintendent. MKI-wock mayor service every Thursday cvcnlnuat 7 o’clock. Sunday-School officers and teachers meetlnv follow prayer service. A cordial Invitation extended to all: come and worship with us. ST. MARYS CHURCH. Elder J. R. THIGPEN. Paetor. l’roachlfik every second Sunday and Satur day before at 11 o’clock a. in. and 7p. m. i his church Is located within the eastern corporate limits. REFUGZ "iwTii’f CHURCH. Elder L. M. GUTHRIE, Pastor. VreachtnK (in every second Sunday and Sat urday before at II o'chick a. m. This church Is located at Sweetwater creek, two miles north of Pearson. A cordial welcome lo all visitors. union hiiTcongregational GHURCH. Rev. D. J. PEARSON, Pastor. Preaching on every fourth .Sunday and Sat urday before at 1! o'clock a. in. Sunday-School every Sunday at ;i o’clock l». m. Thin church l« located near Ited bluff creek, four mlh M southeast of I’oarson. Vou will be welcome at all services. FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCHES* 07,1 AS CHUKCHl—Preaching every second Sunday and Saturday before In each month, at It o’clock, a. m. WM. WILSON, Clerk. O. i„ STARLING, I’aßto OAK-GROVE (111 Itt 11 -IToachlne every lourth Sunday at 11 o'clock, a. in. and Hatur day before at t o'clock, p. m. 11. SIMM AN'S, f’lcrk. ('. L. STARLING, Pastor. PEARSON CHARGE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH SOUTH Rev. O. B. TALLY, Pastor in Charue. Rev. G. P. PADRICIC. Local Preacher. G. W. HADSOCK, Exhorter. PEARSON —Preach In ft at 11:00 a. m. and 7.011 p. m. on the second and lourth Sundays. Sunday-School every Sunday at ikIKI p. m. David Kirkland, Superintendent. Mid-week prnyer-nioettnd on Wednesdays at 7:00 p. in. WESLEY ('lt Al’EL— Preach lint on the first Sundays, 11:00 a. m. each day. Sunday-School every Sunday. J. W. Roberts, Supt. SWEETWATER—Preac.hIn* on the llrst Sundays at 3:00 p. m. Sunday-School every Sunday, dell Rlcketson. Supt. KIRKLAND— Preach lua mi second Sundays at 3:00 p. 111. Sunday-School every Sunday. Mrs. C. W. Corbitt, Supt. SPRINGHEAD—PreachImt on third Sun days at 12:00 m. and Sal urday Indore at 10:00 a. m. Sunday-School every Sunday. 11. W. Corbitt, Supt. ItItIDGES CIIAPEI/—Preachlmt the third Sundays at 10:00 a. ill. and Saturday In-lore al 12:1*1 m. Sunday-School every Sunday. .1.1 Palford. Supt. SALEM—Preachlmt on the lourth Sundays at 8:00 p. m. Will preach the filth Sundays by request. P*oft Jssionql ( l'cls. 1)R. W. L. IMUTCHETT DENTIST. COUTUTT bITILDINO, - PhWItSON, (SKnIWJIA Offick I>avs: Huturtlays and Mondays, other days by appointment. Write or ’phone Tor appointments In the country. Du. HENRY I'. SMITH Peakson, Georgia Office ]n Post Office Huildfm DICKERSON & M INGITDOKIT attorneys and counselors Office In the New Palford Building Pearson, (■ eougia Practice In all the Courts, state and Federal Mr. Dickerson w ill he In olfiee every I’luirs day unless other engagements prevent. DIP 1!. S. MALONE, ORlceln Malone Block PEARSON, (I A. I!KN.I. T. ALLEN ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR O(Rees Hi the Allen building. Pearson, Georgia. Will do a general practice In State and Fed eral Courts. Found. A small size Bracelet found, on street in Pearson. Owner can get same by identifying property and paying for this notice. Call al Trirc xe office. | Used 40 Years | CAADIIi * The Woman’s Tonic { Hi Sold Everywhere £ • .. 5 PEARSON TRIBUTE, PEARSON, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 20, 1918 The South CAN Grow Wheat And WILL Grow Wheat As A War Measure It Is Willing To Do More Than Its Part To Feed Our Soldiers And Allies —The South Holds The Banner For Increase In Wheat Acreage. Charles A. Whittle, Editorial Manager, Soil Improvement Atlanta, Ga. The South win grow more wheat this year than last because it i» Patriotic and Willing. It is willing to do its part, and more, to feed our ever-increasing army abroad —and to feed it well. It is willing to do its part, and more, that our allies may not suffer from ,hunger. It is willing to do Its part, and more, to grow wheat besides meeting the great responsibility of growing cotton, of producing vegetable oils and meal from cotton, peanuts and velvet beans; of growing rice, sugar and other crops which the South alone can produce and for which no other section can render help. The South carries the banner for the largest percentage of acre in crease In wheat in the country for the past season. It can retain that banner. The great whoat belt of the West will have a big task to wrest 'it from it. Some Facts About Growing Wheat In The South, j The universal success attending the growing of wheat in the South during the past season is evidence enough that it can be done again. ! Wheat can be grown best on clay loams or sandy clay loamß. The soli should be broken as early as possible and harrowed. Varieties that have done wen in a community are most likely the best to sow. i The seed should be treated for smut before planting. The formaldehyde I treatment Is preferable. Seeding in October tt- better than November la the South. A good, vigorous growth is desired before winter sets in. Where the Hessian Ely is found, wheat should not be sown until after the first frost. Better yields are obtained when the seed is drilled into the ground than when sown broadcast. Fertilizer can be applied in the drill. Generally speaking, a 10-2-2 fer tilizer or similar brand will be found satisfactory and profitable at this time. Don’t be stingy with it. Nitrate of soda or sulphate of ammonia can usually be applied profitably as a top dressing in early spring. Fall Reminders. Remember that the time to select, seed corn is in the field, from good healthy stalks, that have a maximum number of ears placed right on the stalk. Selecting good seed for the cotton crop next year should likewise be at tended to while the plant, is still growing. Tag the desirable stalks and keep the pickings separate. Kill the bean and pea weevils and save the grain by treating them with carbon bi-sulphide. Four 2 to 4 pounds cm top of the grain and cover with old sacks for 48 hours. Enclose them in tight boxes or other containers. It they show up again, gaß them again in the same way. MILLIONS OF SOLDIERS SWARM Y.M.C. A. HUTS Annual Report of Southeastern De. partment Reveals 38,866,980 Boys In Camps Crowded Buildings (By U Porter Moore.) Atlanta, Ga., August 25.—An attend ance of nearly twenty times the pop ulation of Atlanta swarmed happily in Y. M. C. A. huts in the seven stub s of the Southeastern camps dur ing the fiscal year July 1, 1917, to July 1, 1918, according to the annual re port just issued here. In other words, soldiers In the South eastern cantonments to the number of 38,566,980 men wrote letters in the ”Y" army and navy huts, read litera ture there and joined in the religious services and entertainments held in the lied Triangle buildings which dot military reservations in Georgia, Ala bama, Tennessee, the Carolinas, Mis sissippi Rnd Florida. It Is easy to imagine the mountains of stationery the Y. M. C. A. provided in the camps of the Southeast when it is stated that soldiers wrote 32,- 889,002 letters in the “Y" huts. The Red Triangle workers also made out $2,403,744 worth of money orders for the soldiers, most of the amount be ing sent, home to relatives. Educational Work Featured The “Y” also provided 4,005 educa tional lectures with a soldier attend ance of 1,291,243. The educational classes of various kinds aggregated 64.513 and the attendance was 978,- 045. Books circulated by the Y. M. C. A. numbered 764,710 and educational clubs formed among the men wt re 649. Physical activities when figured in statistics amounted to an amazing amount. It is estimated 3,653,350 par ticipated in the various physical ac tivities such as baseball, track and field meets, baseball, etc. The spectators, the majority of them soldiers, at these physical activities, are estimated for the year at 5,646,- 318. The resume of religious activities shows that 3,464.451 persons attended 16.468 religious meetings under “Y” auspices in the Southeast, that 21.25 S Bible classes were formed among the soldiery with attendances ranging at 395.345, that 223,232 Scriptures were distributed, that "Y” workers had 157,- 533 personal Christian interviews with soldiers, that the boys made 43,093 Christian decisions and that 72,693 signed the religious war roll. The attendance at the social events of the Y. M. C. A. was phenomenal during the year 3.713,609 attending 8,190 entertainments. The attendance at the “Y” movie shews was estimated at 4,678,530 for $ 222 performances. THREE WAR MEDALS BESTOWED 0N“ Y”HERO Red Triangle Worker Wounded by Hun Machine Gun at Soisscns, Teul and Chateau Thierry Now Y'ork, August 25.—Flat on h'.s hack in the Waldorf Astoria hotel. IV. A. Roberts, who lias been award d three French war medals for bravery in the fighting zones, is enjoying a well-earned rest, and is talking freely of almost anything but why the French government showered honors upon him. Mr. Roberts, a Y. M. C. A. worker In France, had bestowed upon him the Croix de Guerre, the badge of the lx'gion of Honor, and the Medal Mill taire. He won them all in three months. Roberts was assistant auditor of the Michigan Central railroad before he was selected to be auditor of disburse ments for the Y. M. C. A. in France, and to handle more than a quarter of a million dollars a day. He left for overseas service February 12, was wounded by a Hun machine gun at Soissons, rescued a “Y" secretary amid a hail of bullets in the Toul sector and was touched up by German marks manship again at Chateau Thierry. Y.M.C. A.NEEDS MEN IN SOUTHERN CAMPS While Red Triangle Continues to Call for Overseas Workers, 1,000 Are Wanted for Home Service Atlanta, Ga., August 25.—Men en dowed with the element of leadership are needed by the Army and Navy Y. M. C. A. to serve in the camps of the Southeast Dr. \ m W. Alexander, general re cruiting secretary for the War Per sonnel Board of the Y. M. C. A. War Work Council, declares that there is a pressing need for home service, and that this affords a splendid opportun ity to the man of middle age who is not able to go abroad under the Red Triangle. “The \\ M. C. A. needs men for overseas service, of course, but the home camps must not be forgotten,” explained Dr. Alexander. “From now on until the first of the year the Southeast must recruit 1.000 men for the home camps. This means that each state will be called upon to fur nish 25 men per month per state to serve the soldiers in camps such as Gordon. Jackson, Wheeler and the others. The constant growth of the home cantonments and the growing demand for the Y. M. C. A. work makes it necessary to recruit “Y” workers for this side.” 11 Women! 1§ I .*M Here Is a message to feA' a Buffering women, from [fl |! I 9 Mrs. W. T. Price, of In || 119 fered with painful...”, iga |j In she writes. “I got down j 6 with a weakness in my JEj B hack and. limbs... I HIS 1 felt helpless and dls- |§ :|S fl couraged.. .1 had about H jig H given up hopes of ever fl |H m B being well again, when fl 111 *s M a friend Insisted I FVJFj' Take ‘•® t SARDUI The Woman’s Tonic ffiff A began Cardui. In ; jfl a short while I saw a urn j| fl marked difference... IB [I ! jfl I grew stronger right [HI ‘•fl along, and it cured me. |B{ IV I am stouter than I Ygi ■ have been In years.” B ■ B If you suffer, you can fl I fl appreciate what It fl B fl means to be strong and ® sd I well. Thousands of wo- gj & F men give Cardui the WJrl Iffl Credit for their good [m|] H health. It should help H you. Try Cardui. At all {M]\ !fl druggists. E-73 |H Feed Out Your Hogs Six Weeks Earlier. In every lot of hogs on feed two yr three weeks quickly and actual ly eat less than others. If all would fatten like these, the entire drove would he ready for the mar ket six weeks feed is an item that you fully understand. The hog that fattens easily must he in prime physical condition. The 11. A. Thomas' Ilog Powder is a conditioner for hogs. It keeps their system clean and healthy and enable them to fatten quickly without falling a prey to the usual diseases of hogs. The A. A. Thom as' Ilog Powder is not stock food. It's straight medicine and we took the agency because it enables you ,o feed out your hogs much curlier. For sale by the Pn arson H ard wake Store, Pearson, < ia. Fair Warning to All! f .MM, ss*,*HHSß>S£slHSi!SßlW3ft*3Siß43K£i2BfNß3®?£ The Sacrifice Sale which has been on at my Store for the past 30-THIRTY DAYS-30 Wiil be continued a few days and if you haven’t supplied yourselves with the goods you need, you have another opportunity of doing so. Come and examine my Goods and let me quote you prices. Everything in the Store is Firstciass Stock I GUARANTEE THE PRICES IS RIGHT. Make my Store your headquarters w T hen in the city. N. E. HARRELL Harrell Building (JK Pearson, Georgia | Passon s Department Store I. PASSON, Proprietor I have a full line of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes and Hats, bought at the old prices, which I am offering for quick sale at 30 per cent, less than they can be bought elsewhere. _____ " 'ii mi tmr—r— -1 bought this stock six months ago; the same goods cannot be bought at wholesale for the prices I am offering them at retail. wmmmmaamma Come in and see this line of goods. It will cost you nothing to look at them. Palford Bldg., ■ Pearson, Ga. Military Science and Tactics are Taught at PIEDMONT INSTITUTE A College and Preparatory School for the Boys and Girls of South and Southeast Georgia IT HAS A STRONG CHRISTIAN FACT LTV. II offers not only preparatory but standard courses leading to the A. P>. and B. S. degrees, and works In the depart ments of Art, Music, Ex pression, Teachers' Training < curse, Domestic Science, Book keeping, Shorthand and Typewriting and Military Science. Tuition for the regular literary courses, room and board, costs only '2l ti.OO for a session of nine months Military Science and Tactics will be given extra to boys taking the regular literary courses. School opens September :’,rd. Those who have finished Ih> Sixth Grade may enter. \\ rite for catalogue and further information, JAMES F. WATSON, A. B. and B. S., President, \Yay( Ross. Gkorgia, I*, t). Box 2J.