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GIBSON RECORD
Official Organ of Glascock County
Entered at the Postoffice at Gibson,
Ga., as Second Class Mail Matter
PttM.VV-'! CvAr day
Subscription Price $1.00 Per Yetjr
Mrs. Mae Dukes and E. E. Lee,
Editors. Publishers and Owners
i or*iK» »rivrr!i«ln«t Rrprc»rnt«tlv« | I
L THE AMERICAN PRE SS AS S OCIATION
.
We are not responsible for opinions
eg pressed by correspondents or
others through our columns
•iitaAtm, (la. Wednesday, May 17.1922
Sanitary (Jude of the Bible
Much lias Imcn raid and written
upon i he subject of the Ten Command
mi nia. Indeed for the most part all
ilvli and criminal law* throughout
Christendom* are based upon these
laws, which were handed to the world
by .Moses and engraved on the latdea
, of HlOBO.
While these laws are fundamental,
and their observance esserdlal to th»
other Integrity of a nation, yet there la an
or eleventh commandment whttoi
might be nominated as the "Sanitary
Code” of Moses, Thla Is found tn
verses 13. 14 and 15 lu the 23rd
chapter of Deuteronomy,
The observance of thla law waa
scarcely of less importance to th#
hoaltli welfare, and even the lives of
those who had followed Moses across
th# Red Sea and Into the wilderness,
than was any one of those found In
tr.e umiai and religious code.
Clod did for these unfortunate chU.
dren of his, that which they could
not do for themselves. He caused the
rock to give forth pure, clear, epark
ling water to satisfy their thirst and
to cool and cleanse their hot, dusty
feet. Quail, a very choice and nu
tritious meat, In large numbers came
Into the camps In the evening, and
bread was rained from heaven in the
morning. In this manner a helpless
host of about two million was pro
vtded with food and water.
However, sickness, afflictions and
even epidemics of disease were certain
to make heir appearance unless every
sanitary precaution were taken. This
was a condition over which these peo
ple had control, and therefore the mi
raculous powers of God In preventing
or curing the serious maladies that are
certain to follow In the path of un
sanitary living are unnecessary.
A* it was with these dwellers ia
the Wilderness of Sin, located between
Elin' and Sinai, so ft Is with all
those who live between the north and
south poles today.
is a long list of dlsee-es which
strict sanitary measures will prevent
altogether, or reduce to a minimum.
Among the diseases that head the list
are to be found: Tuberculosis, Ma
laria, infhtensa. Typhotd Fever, Hook
worm Disease, Cholera, Dysentery, Yel
low Fever, Dengue. Plague, Scarlet
Fever, Diphtheria, Whooping Cough
and Measles.
The civilised world is Just beginning
to undertake the observance of the
Mosaic Sanitary Code. Evon yet
eenuo of those who stand before the
congregation and proclaim, expound
end Interpret the laws of and are them
selive# guilty of violating the spirit
of the Sanitary Code, as well as the
pistil Commandment, (Thou Shalt
Not Kill,) at least at a negative way.
Many of these diviaes. regardless ot
tb‘* l»n*lh of the (tasked which con
iieins i b c lifeless body of one w)to has
recently departed Ibis Hfo, ore heard
ta say, “For sa much as It hath
nleiwd Almighty God, in His wisdom,
lo lake out of this world our belov
ed- “
ty is by no ntontro prudent to t»itrib
ute to the will nor power ot God the
Voss of a human lfTe which was sac
tlflced upon thn niter of preventable
diseaites.
If cerlalu ot the maladies lo which
man falls a victim are preventable,
(hoii w hen death claims one of us as
I* result of such diseases. It ia not at
the behest ot a loyin* Heavenly Fath
er: but tt t» deeply the result of Igno
re ice or wilful npgligenes of some ouc
or more of the cjhlldren of me*.
If none of these conditions art* pre
ventable millions of dollars are wasted
In an effort to combat then), .the fig
ure* of our Vital Statisticians are
false, science la e. farce and General
Gorges and Moses were Imposters.
Ttw work ii) conserving health and
human life ta, scientific economy, mo
rality and religion.'
Whooping Cough
This is a very dangerous disease,
particularly to qhildtjw* w*)«* under five
years of age, bujt no paregoric,
codeine or othqr, opiate is given, is
easily eured,by giving Chamberlain's
Cough R^nw-’dry. Most people believe
that it must run its course, not know
ing that the time is very much short
ened, and that there is little danger
from the disease when this remedy is
given. It has been used in many epi
demics of whooping cough, with, pro
nounced success. It is safq and-pleas
ant to take.
M|npr>
The cradtq is. s. simple appHan*#
far treating “tuty, dirt,"' ,..,th ;l nd
gravel ceilt;<tti>l«t-,k».|. | t , m
Hist* essoiaieliy „i » bu.<, mounted on
roekerk ami provided with a per
fprated butipm of sheet iron In which
the "V»y dirt" ia platjrd. pjhter Is
poured ou the dirt, and the rooking
motion Imparted to the cradle causes
the finer particles to pass through
flip perforated Imrtom onto a canvas
screen, nnd thence to the bate of the
iradle, where the gold-dust accumu
lates op trim verge bars of
"04fes."
SWINE SANITATION BY FILM
Roundworm Causes Great Losoca Each
Voar to Hog Grower*—Paraaitoo
Shown Growing.
(Prepared by the United State* Department
of Agriculture.>
The life and adventures of a worm
noulrt not seem to be promising ina
terlal for a movie scenario, but a Him
recently Issued by the Lofted State*
Department of Agriculture proves that
the doings of such a lowly organism
as the roundworm that Infests the
intestines of swine may be absorbing.
Ascnris lumbricoides is the scientific
name for tills parasite that causes
great losses every year to swine grow
ers, and the title of the educational
picture Is “ExJt Ascarls,”
The screen story is built around
two neighbor farmers, one of whom
has success with his pigs and the other
so much hard fuck that be is dis
couraged almost to the point of giving
up the business. The man with the
unthrifty herd goes down the road
to see the successful bog raiser about
his troubles and is told that round
worms are the probable cause of his
failure. But be is skeptical and re
mains unconvinced until a federal
veterinarian Is called In to diagnose
the case.
The veterinarian brings a high
power microscope and sets It up on a
box in the hog yard where he shown
the farmer and Ills neighbor that (he
soil of the lot Is badly Infested with
the minute eggs of the roundworm.
The eggN with the squirming young
worms sfiown plainly visible within the walls
are In the field of the micro
scope that Is reproduced on the film.
Then the entire life history of th#
worm fs shown, from the time* the
egg is swallowed by the unwitting
pig until the parasite ts mature and
one of hundreds In the Intestines. The
growing worms are shown to the owner
right tn his own sick pigs where there
are plenty of specimens in various
stages of development from the very
d glgll’k
S:"
M."
r
n§ II 1
gig l
Jt r
t I
On# Little Pig Had Worms, the other#
Had None.
small, newly hatched forms up to
those that are futt grown and wore
tlian a foot In length.
This film, "Exit Ascnris,” will be sent
to extension workers and hold men
of the department and the state agri
cultural colleges and to farm bureaus.
Other organizations that are Interested
In improving, the swine Industry muy
get reels when they are available,
and prints of the film may be pur
chased at cost by anyone who care*
to own tt. Inquiries should be ad
dressed to the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. O.
MIXED INFECTION IN SWINE
Heg Industry Would Be Better Off If
More Attention Given to
Cholera, Saye Expert.
Mixed infection lu lings Is receiving
too much notoriety. Tills name was
Invented by a biological house for the
purpose of putting a new baeterln on
the market. The new baeterln is sup
posed to prevent jpveral of (he com
plications of hog Cholera, such ns
swlue plague. From a scientific stand
point, the term "mixed Infection"
means nothing, if more attention
were given to hog cholera and less to
’‘mixed Infection,” the hog Industry
would be better off.—Dr. O. 8. Wcaver,
South Dakota.
THE “OLD REIIABLE
THEDFORD’S BLACK-DRAUGHT
Wlit« Haired Alabama Lady Says She Ha* Seen Medkmes Coma
mi Go But The "Old Reliable” Tbedford’a Black-Draught
Came and Stayed.
Dutton, Ala.—In recommending
lord’s Black-Draught to her friends
neighbors here, Mrs. T. F. Parks, a well
known Jackson County lady, said; “I am
getting up in years: my head is pretty
white. I have seen medicines and rente
dies come and go but the old reliable
cameand stayed. 1 am talking of Black
Draaght, a liver medicine we have used
for years—one that can be depended up
on and one that will do the work.
"Black-Draught will relieve indigestion
and constipation if taken right, and 1 know
for I tried it. It is he best tiling 1 have
ever found for the full, uncomfortable
FEED FOR FATTENING LAMBS
Animala in a Dry-Lot Should Have
Shelled Corn Twice Dally—
Allow Plenty Salt.
To fatten feeder lambs In dry lot al
!ow them each a pound of shelled corn
twice dally, two pounds of corn silage,
wltl , a b 0 ut one-sixth pound of ollmeal
with t |, e silage, and plenty of
alfa | fa „ r #oyb ean hay in the after
noon AHo w plenty of salt,
jeor growing lambs a good ration is
made 0 f equal parts of corn, oats, bran
atl ,j oilmen]. Furnish plenty of good
p av '
_______
PROPER EXERCISE FOR
-
Part of Roughage Should Be Fed in
Field at Some Distance From
the Barnt.
Breeding ewes should get enough
exercise. One of the causes of weak
lambs Is due to the fact that ewes
have not adequate exercise. When it
can be arranged, at least a part of the
roughage should be fed In the field at
some distance from the barns or the
shed, and the ewes should he out
every day that the weather is fair.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER’S
CASTORIA
Evils of Constipation
Perhaps the most serious ot the uis
eases caused by constipation is appen
dicitis. If you would avoid this danger
•it* >><b ■A. U P J ■•••» '• s
F.<r .hitii U'P se Chaintierta*n’s T -
I LilIV Ck
mild and gentle in effect.
Cv. .. „;ve.
“War that your wife 1 vou with
the other evening headed f< >
trc.nr “My wife was with me one
<venlng and the next 1 happened to
meet a young lady who lives out at
our station. Don't know which—by
the way. who whs carrying the par
cels?" "You were, ot course." “Oh,
that was Miss Cutely you saw*
•—Philadelphia Ledger.
Fora burn or scald apply Chamber
Inin's lam s Salve halve. It H will will sllav allay the the nain pa a al al
most instantly and quickly heal the
injured parts. uutverUaeasMO
Legal Advertisements .
SHERIFF SALE
GEORGIA—Glascock County.
There will be sold on the first Tues
,day in June, 1922, before Che th!
House Iloor ot «aid county tn
Town of Gibson, Georgia, between the
legal hours of sale, to the highest bid
der, for cash, at public outcry, the
following property, to-wit;
Ail that tract of land lying partly in
Glascock and partly in Jefferson
County, Georgia, containing 386 acres,
more or less, and known as Lot No. 8
in the division of the estate of Wil
liam Walden, which was drawn by H.
S. Walden as an heir at law of said es
tate, and which land is bounded on
the oiorth by lands of M. M. Williams
arid Albert Rachael’; East by lands of
K. P Walden; Soutli by lands of K^e
iiu Walden; and West by lands of M.
M. Williams.
Said land levied upon and to be solu
as the property of II. S. Walden, Uu
der and by vfrtue of an execution is
sued from th* regular February term,
1922, of the Superior Court of Glas
cock County, Georgia, in favor of E.
A. Loftm versus the said H. 8. Wal
den, defendant in fi fa. And the levy
is made for the purpose of satisfying
said execution. Notice given to the
owner in possession and his tenants.
Levy made by me this 9th day of May,
1922.
This 9th day of May, 1922.
J. J. Killebrew, Sheriff,
Glascock County, Ga
feeling after meals. Sour stomach and
sick headache can be rtlrsved by taking
Black-Draught It tods digestion, also
sslstuthe liver ia throwing oft intpurl
ties, I am glad to recommend Black
Draught, and do, to my inends and
neighbors.’*
Thedford’s Black-Draught is a stand
and household remedy with a record oi
01 *r seventy years ot successful use
B /cry one occasionally needs something
ta help cleanse the system ol imparities,
Tt, y Black-Drwght Insist upon Thed*
fM d’s, the genuine,
. At all druggists. O.W
SPRING CLEANING NOTES.
In the Springtime all the world put*
on a newness of life. The buds put
forth, the. birds build nests and all
nature revives from the dormant state
of winter. The housewife cleans the
house inside while others are busy put*
ting on a new coat of paint on the out.
gide Trash is sweDt P nn P and burned
The yard fence is put In good condf
tlon. The flower beds receive their
proportionate amount of attention. Ail
are kept busy around the home, beau
tifying here and there.
All this is well and good, for the
better the condition the house and Its
surroundings are kept in, the more
pride they will reveal, the longer they
will last and the more easily they can
be repaired and kept beautiful. This
spring cleaning and mending help to
preserve the life of your bouse and
premises.
While we are engaged in this hit of
cleaning let us not forget to put our
own bodies in each conditions that
they be able to resist all diseases that
* re prevalent in the Summer, such as
*®*l a rf a . typhoid fever, etc. Just as
the P afntin K of the house preserve Its
life, just so the taking of preventive
medicine will preseve your health and
probably life. Expel the "spring
fever" with a dose of the medicine of
proper living. Tone up the resistance
of your body against disease, for iater
on the hot weather way tend to lower
your vitality and weaken your resist
ance, thereby permitting an invasion
of disease germs. *
f£* 2 £
thereby in a large measure preventing
malarie, which is carried only by
mosquitoes. In other words when you
are doing your spring cleaning, bear
in mind your own body, for therein
lies all the happiness that may come
from making your home more beauti
ful. We sometimes tail to realize that
we must protect our body against dis
ease. The fanner knows that he
must protect his peaches, apples,
watermelons, etc., from diseases pe
culiar to them. We too. must take
simitar precautions against diseases
peculiar to our own bodies,
Dor what will it profit a man to
make his home rnOst beautiful and
then through negligence to himself
and his family not be able to enjoy
that beauty because of a long Illness
a " d Probably death of one or more of
^ 8 ove< ^ on<?8 - The health of the mem
bera of the famlly whlch cong ,j tute the
home Is far more to be desired than
the exterior and Interior beauty of
the house in which they live. The
State Board of Health is always glad
to give advice.
INSTITUTE CLINIC, ATLANTA,
JUNE 5TH TO 10TH
Emory University, in connection with
ibe State Board of Health, will put on
an lnstitute-ciintc this summer very
much like the successful one hold last
July. The coming one wilt be much
htrger in scope and of much grea'er
benefit to the physicians of the State
At the same ttma the alumni of
Emory University of the Medical De
partment will be invited here, and
many features will be put on for
alumni week .
» Dr. T. B. Abercrombie, Commission
er of Health of the State, has issued
a call for a conference of all the city
and county health officers tc be to
session for four days during this same
week. The sessions will not conflict
any more than can be helped.
Clinics in all the hospitals in the
city are being arranged, as well as
continuous clinics at Gray Clinic and
Grady Hospital. Three hundred beds
will be set aside for special study for
the visiting physicians.
The Laboratories of the city will
keep open house; this is especially
true of the State Board of Health
Laboratory under Prof. Sellers.
All physicians who can possibly do
so should make their arrangements to
be here throughout the entire week,
beginning with a reception and lunch
eon at Emory University Monday
morning. June 6th.
The first venereal disease lecture
will be by Prof. S'ewart Roberts at
2 p. m. Monday at Emory.
Tuesday evening Dr. Seale Harris,
President of the Southern Medical As.
sociatloti, will deliver a public address
on, “Diet and Nutrition in Relation to
Public Health,’’ at Wesley Memorial
Church.
Dr. C. N. Myers, of New York City,
■will deliver two lectures on 60S.
A great week has been arranged;
it is all given without any charge
whatever.
No physician who wishes to keep in
touch *ith the latest thought in hia
profession can afford to stay away.
There Bbould be a thousand phy
sicians in attendance, and w« hope
our doctors for this county will take
advantage ot the opportunity.
80ME HEALTH DONTS
F ° R C H 1 L 0 R E N
Don't forget to wash your hands be
fore eating.
Don’t • forget to keep your teeth,
mouth, and nose clean.
Don’t kiaa other children, and don’t
let anyone kiss you.
Don’t pick your nose, or wipe your
nose on your hands or sleeve.—Use
your handkerchief.
Don’t wet your fingers when you
turn the pages of a book, nor wet the
end of your pencil In your mouth
Don't put money or pins in your
mouth.
Don’t spit on the sidewalk, the floor
or your slate.
Don't swap with other children
such things as candy, chewing gum.
apples, whistles, beau throwers, or
anything that may have been in any.
one else's mouth.
Don't sneeze or cough into another
child's face, but turn your head aud
use your handkerchief.
Don’t let other children r~- snooze or
cough into your face. Turn or move
away.
Don’t forget that you are your play
mate’* keeper. If be gets sick, it
may be your fault.
II L-1V 1 cigarettes m m /1 / Mi
4 si
f 9 M
A year ago 1 W 0
almost unknown
Today — a leader
A sweeping verdict for QUALITY
^Te«e°r X by
Anthony Trollope, the novelist, who
t ”T
The
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Cotton Dusiti
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This is the most practical dustir.g mail.,it n u.e. it it. ihc
result of close study and actual experience in past years of cot
ton dusting. Any place wnere a mule can walk can be dusted
with this machine. There is no trouble from s'umps, lopr,
■ <.. V, "
• 1 i tic '
For Sale Bv
SWAIN – DtBEAUuHiNE
Warren ton, Ga.
JAMES H. BATTLE
Warrenton, Ga.
Office Phone 28 Dwelling Phone 39
INSURANCE
Established in 1900
FIRE TORNADt
AUTOMOBILE CAUSALTY
BOLL WEEVIL LIVESTOCK
Companies that have been doing Insurai cc bus
iness in Warren and Glascock counties for a
hundred years. All losses for twenty years*
have been paid promptly. Can you ask for any
better? Do you wish any more? lhe cable ol
public confidence of which no ^strand has ever
been broken.
See Battle before the fire
JET* «/ wore
masks either to protect theii coro
re*** * 'tn * >ij ‘ihh »>