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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Prevent Food Poisoning | Healthmad

Prevent Food Poisoning | Healthmad



Prevent food poisoning this summer. Foods left out too long can become contaminated with bacteria and cause major problems of diarrhea, nausea and vomiting. You can usually treat a light case of food poisoning at home but if the symptoms continue it’s best to see a doctor, especially small children

Monday, July 25, 2011

Drug Companies RIP Off Consumers with Excessive Prices | Healthmad

Drug Companies RIP Off Consumers with Excessive Prices | Healthmad



Drug Companies rip off consumers every time the doctor hands out a prescription. The ingredients in these medications costs the manufactures less than the bottles that hold them. Yet patients pay through the nose. Money that doesn’t go into manufactures pockets goes for advertisements of the product and bribes to doctors. That’s why drug manufactures have the highest profits in the world of business.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Dead Bodies All Over The House | Socyberty

Dead Bodies All Over The House | Socyberty


In this crime infested neighborhood in Cleveland, Ohio, murders went on for two years with bodies lying in the house and yard of Anthony Sowell. Nothing was reported to police until one woman went to authorities with a story of being savagely attacked and raped in the home at the hands of Sowell. When police arrived to investigate they found Sowell digging a grave in his back yard.

The Ways of Our Grandmothers | Gomestic

The Ways of Our Grandmothers | Gomestic


Our grandmothers who lived in the mountains and foothills of Georgia were pioneer stock. They had few or no doctors and had to treat their families by trial and error. A goodly portion of these remedies work as well as those recommended by doctors. Grandmother’s remedies have been handed down and some of the families in remote mountain hollows continue to use them today.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Cotton Milling in Georgia | Socyberty

Cotton Milling in Georgia | Socyberty



Atlanta, Georgia was the site of the International Cotton Exposition in 1881, all due to a Boston textile executive. It featured the latest technology and machinery of the cotton industry. People from Georgia and all over the south came to see the ginning, spinning, weaving, dying and printing of cloth plus the latest farm machinery and methods of farming. Sponsors were bankers, textile companies and farming equipment companies. As a result of the exposition business owners and merchants realized that every town in Georgia should have it’s own cotton mill.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Quilts to Treasure | Quazen

Quilts to Treasure | Quazen



Our mothers and grandmothers in North Georgia made quilts to keep the family warm and comfortable through cold winter nights. In spite of these utilitarian acts and without their knowledge, they were making art. Museums look for these old quilts made during the depression and earlier, but most families will not part with them. They are too precious with memories of loved ones who made them and passed on. These are just a few of those old quilts.

A Sustainable Food Chain and Citizen Responsibility | Quazen

A Sustainable Food Chain and Citizen Responsibility | Quazen


We use half our grain to feed cattle when millions in the world are going hungry. Cattle returns only half the food value and are a major contributor to global warming. A few monopolizing cooperation’s are racking in the money at the expense of the environment and the citizenry. We as citizens can learn to discard
"rules" we have learned through tradition and strive to make a difference.