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GIBSON RECORD
Official Organ of Glascock County
at the Postoffice at Gibson,
Ga., as Second Class Mail Matter
Published Every Wednesday
Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year
Mrs. Mae Dukes and E. E. Lee,
Editors. Publishers and Owners
| THEa'^^IC V ANPR–?A33(KIATION
We are not responsible for opinions
expressed by correspondents or
others .through our columns
Gibson. Ga. Wednesday, Nov. 22, 1922
RADIO FOSSIBILITIEB
**The probable effect of rmdie 4»>
fdbpment upon the world is a «b6
|act so far-reaching la its postilrili
ties that it is dsasUag,” aaid I.
Oerosback. editor of Science and In
vention, at a recent engineering con
ference in New York. “The radio
industry is an infant that will grow
into gigantic importance in a nt J
short time. Although it will peat
ably Barer replace the telephony Mt
will become a necessity. Even now,
with international communication in
• highly developed stage, it has
opened the door to a universal lan
guage. It will ultimately break the
barriers of distinctive languages that
have long been detrimental to
national interoouraa.
NCW FIELD FOR BAD BOY*
The American bad boy, brought la
fame by Thoma* Bailey Aldrtifc,
Hanry Augustus Shuts, Booth Km
kington, and many others, has
a new field for adventure and mb
adventure. His voice is vary Ini
and very persistent in tbs air, wife
less telephone owner* say. Ha vi
brates and booms and gsaeially
blocks transit for
speeches and many other
matters. Doubtless before long, “cep*
of the air” will be telling tbs young
•ten what they may do and what
they may not, but until thw, smy
“real boy” has his day.
' fun at winter carnival
Dog teams, ski jumping end snow
•hoe relay races were features of the
winter carnival held in Portland,
Me., recently, in which the Y. W.
C. A. participated. The snow shoe
dash, the ski jumping and joring
races, and other contests, including
ice racing behind horses, were im
menssly popular. Exhibition skat
ing and hockey games ware alar
featured.
AIR PHOTOGRAPHY
Photography from the possible sir, with
out an airplane, is now by
means of a special arrangement of
kites and cameras, designed by a
Frenchman. The camera travels
the kits string bv means of special
lifting planes, while an automatic
timing device takas pictures any
height wished.
Exceptions.
An astiMfioitier says that the term
•fixed,” jjs applied to stars, U a mis
nomer. Still, we know borne stars that
are mighty welt fixed.—Boston Trsre
script.
666 quickly relieves Colds and
LaGrippc, Constipation, Bilious
ness and Headaches.
JAMES H, BATTLE
Warren ton, Ga.
Office Phone. 28 Dwelling Phone 28
INSURANCE
Established in 1900
FIRE TORNADO
AUTOMOBILE CAUSALTY
LIVE STOCK
Companies that have been doing Insurance bus
iness in Warren and Glascock counties for a
hundred years. AH losses lor twenty years
have been paid promptly. Can you ask for any
better? Do you wish any more? The cable of
public confidence of which no strand has ever
been broken.
See Battle Before The Fire
Legal Advertisements
CITATION
Petition for probate to solemn form
the will of Mrs. Mattie A. Dukes, io
Ordinary’* Court Glascock County,
Georgia.
ToP. M. Dnkes, G. R Dukes and
Charles C. Dukes, heirs at law of Mrs.
Mattie A. Dukes:
Mae Walden Dukes, having applied
as executor, for prolate in solemn form
of the last will and testament of Mrs.
Mattie A. Dukes of said county, you as
heirs at law of said Mrs, Mattie A.
Dukes are hereby required to be and
appear at the court of ordinary of aaid
county on the first Monday in Decem
ber, 1822 , when said application for
probate will be heard, end show
cause, if any you have or can, why the
prayer* of the petition should not be
had and allowed. This 11th d^y of Nov
ember, 1022.
G. C. ENGLISH
Ordinary and Ex. Off 0. C. G.
SHERIFF'S SALE
GEORGIA— Glasci'cx County.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
December next, oufore the Court
House door in Gibson, Georgia, and
between the legal hours of sale, all
that entire stock of goods consisting
of dry goods, shoes, clothing, notions,
millinery, ready-to-wear, and ull other
merchandise belonging to M. S.
Whiteley, and now stored in the two
story brick building situated In Gib
son, Georgia, and on the west side of
Calhoun street, directly in,front of E.
B. Rogers’ residence, and being the
place of business now operated in the
nam^ ot M. S. Whiteley, said property
being levied on as the propertv of M.
S. Whiteley, by virtue of a mortgage
fl fa issued from the Superior Court
of Glascock County, Georgia, in favor
of the Citizens Bank, Wartenton,
Georgia, and against M. S. Whiteley
and the said stock of goods. Said
property levied on and seized by me
October 21, 1922.
This Nov. 4, 1922.
J. J. EILLEBREW,
Sheriff of Glascock Ga.
SHERIFF SALE
GEORGIA—Glascock County.
Will be sold before the court house
door in said county on the first Tues
day in December 1922, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder for
cash, the following described property
to-wlt: All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the 1168th District,
G. M., Glascock County, Ga., contain
ing 214 acres, more or less, and!
bounded as follows—on the north 3
lands of Fred Hobbs, east by Sol Ha
mett. south by Sol C. Phillips, and
west by Joel F. Rabun. The above
described property levied on as the
property of C. A. Chalker to satisfy a
fi. fa. iss-ied from the Superior Court
of said county in favor of Fred J.
Howard, Administrator of S. M. Mc
Nair against C A. Chalker. Notice
given to the defendant in fi. fa. ac
cording to law.
This the first day of November 1922.
J. J. Ku.lebrew, sheriff
Glascock County, Gs.
Less costly Dealing.
"The portrait painter charged me
11,000 to do inv in oil," said the mab
who had Just cleaned up In the stock
market. “You get off cheap," replied
the man who hud been on the losiog
tide. “In the future I think I'll hare
a»y dealings with a painter Instead ad
a broker."
Catarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh is d local disease, greatly
influenced by constitutional condi
tions. It therefore requires constitu
tional treatment. HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE la taken luternally and
acts through the Blood on the Mucous
Surfaces of the System. .HALL’S
CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the
foundation of the disease, gives the
patient strength bv Improving the gen
eral health and assists nature in doing
Its work.
A11 druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney – Co., Toledo, Ohio.
DAIRY
POINTS
GIVE PUREBREDS MORE CARE
Dairyman Often Take* More Interest
In High Claes Stock Because
of Possibilities.
(Prepared kjr the United States Department
ot Agriculture.)
There t* no good reason why It
ahould coat more to care for a good
herd of purebred dairy cows than It
coats to care for the same number of
good grades, although fanners some
times believe that the purebreds are
more expensive to keep. However,
says the United States Deportment of
Agriculture, the dairyman often does
T§. m '{C
•ruG tMm m
.
m J–r
■ f)\
-
m £ i
:
m iV:. PiPS
wm
–
Purebred and Tuberculiw-Taate d Dairy
CfW
spend more on purebred* becai he
sees greater possibilities la thorn, and
consequently takes more tntoroet In
them, feeding them better and build
ing better barna to house them. Re
does not need to do this. bat Utiaslly
ho find* that K pays him In IV
turns and In not return*.
The results would have boon the
same, though possibly not In the same
degree, If bettor care and food had
been given to a good grade herd. But
it sometimes takes the stimulation
supplied by the ownership of a flsw
purebred* to Induce a man to tmpfwe
hla practices.
TREATING STERILITY IN COW
Moat C*s«s Become Chronic or Fortna
nsnt Unto** Properly Handled
Op Veterinarian.
IB many herds where abortion dH
ease is present, from five to ten* per
cent of the cows become sterile or bar
ren, and most cases become chronic
or permanent unless they am treated
by a qualified veterinarian. Dr. W, L.
WlUlama of the New York State Vet
erinary college is to Bo given credit
for the plan of procedure In handling
theae cow*. The treatment should; not
be neglected too long after the cows
manifest this symptom. .
.
A thorough examination of the pa
tient 1* necessary to locate the trou
ble either In the uterus, ovaries or
fallopian tubes, and treated accord
ingly. It Is not uncommon for a akllled
operator to restore five out ot aix cases
to a reproductive state under favor
ahle condition*.
Cases of long standing ahould be
sold to the butcher, as the treatment
falls to help them. A case of more
than eight months’ to one year's
standing la very discouraging to the
operator, for he realizes that function
al changes have taken place In the
reproductive organs that will be diffi
cult to correct by treatment. There
fore do not delay having an nnbnnl
examined and treated la the waiting beginning
of the trouble Instead of until
It Is too late. The annual loss caused
by stsrlllty would be surprisingly high
If survey could be made and accurate
data obtained from the cattle breeders.
RATION MUST BE ATTRACTIVE
Dairy Cow to Do Well Requires Food
Containing Proper Elements
Hr Milk Flow.
Cows won't do well on food that
isn’t palatable, say the feeding men
at the New York College of .Agricul
ture at Ithaca. Not only Bust the
dairy cow’s ration contain the proper
element* If she is to be ‘•worth her
keep,” hut It must be so attractive to
her that She will eat plenty and keep
up a good flow of milk.
On the other hand, say the dairy
men, It MT wise to change a ration
suddenly even to make tt better. A
cow la a delicate milk-producing ma
chine, and sudden changes In her food
are quite likely to upset some part of
the machinery, with a resulting loos of
milk.
The condition of the food probably
has most to do with tt* pjatntahtuty;
moldy grain* or roughage Boat appeal
to any seU-nopectlnf care.
COWS ON PASTURE TOO SOON
Many Owners ; Expect Animals to
Thrlvo on Thin Graso—Groin
Mutt Be Supplied.
Owners of cows usually pat them
out on pasture too soon, expecting the
cow* to get all feed necessary from
scant early pastures. Until the pas
tures have made a good growth, cows
will need about a pound of grain for
every six pounds of milk as well os
dry bar-
BG
STOCK
OF
FORD PARTS A
!
GARAGE and
REPAIR Dept. i
AT SAME OLD STAND.
i
Give Us Your Busi
ness and WE Will
Give You Real Ser
vice.
J. c
WhiteleY
GIBSON, GA.
Burt of Smoking.
Smoking was practiced by the most
primitive peoples, Tobacco, opium.
and hemp were the herbs most used.
Hie Invention of the pipe, while ob
scure as to time, conies from the fre
quent use of herbs burnt In container*
es a sacrifice or for healing purpose*.
The person to be cured inhaled the
amoke. A portable container with a
tube for the smoke wds a logical do
relopment of this practice.
Children FLETCHER'S Cry
FOR
C A ST0 8J A
PHINIZY – COMPANY
COTTON FACTORS
AUGUSTA, GA.