Newspaper Page Text
22 (790)
Poor, Foolish
Woman!
Think of hor at/s\
(0\ tempting to make
\ ice cream in the
/CT \ fid disappointing
I A way I With
V / JELL-0
\r5SW ICE CREAM
Powder
she can make the
most delicious ice cream in ten minutes,
freezing and all, at a cost of about one
nonf a rliali ?> ? ? ?? -*1 ?*
gvmzur trie au/vc.
Your grocer will tell you all about
it, or you can get a book frqw the
Genesee Pure Food Co., LeRoy, N.Y.,
if you will write tliem.
Grocers sell Jell-O lee Cream Powder,
10 cents a package.
Sydnor & Hundley
s Leading In s
FURNITURE
s And s
CARPETS
RICHMOND. = VA.
Via Bristol
AncfThe
Norfolk & Western
Railway
The Short Line Between
NEW ORLEANS, BIRMINGHAM, MEMPHIS,
CHATTANOOGA, KNOXVIILE
AND
WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA, NEW
YORK.
Solid Train Service Dining Car.
All information cheerfully furnished.
WARREN L. ROHR,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Western Passenger Agent.
W. B- BEV1LL,
General Passenger Agent,
Roanoke, Va.
APPLES
Smm Victoria made rar apple* famous
as tke best Savored apples la tbe
world. She used to set her apples from
the orchards of Albemarle Co., VlrKlala.
Yoa eaa do so too.
Do yoa waat apples that will taste as
they did when yon were a boy?or a
Kir If
We sold loot season la ST dlflereat States,
aad from every section some of
them great apple raising sections?*nr
eastomers wrote that they had never
befere had apples of inch lie flavor.
Ws are trying all the time to grow
better applea aad to Improve aad sea he
mere sea v sal eat oar packages.
What hotter Christmas Gift than a boa
or a barrel of oar flne Apploaf
The Albemarle Orchard to.,
gAM'L M. wonnt p~.??'
CHARLOTTESVILLE. VIRGINIA.
ETfLL BALE
1B0 Feet Long for 75o
fflMagm Oalyanizad Panttrr Netting
wnirrroR ciscUutite.
Hfmr" " *?-g'vottUDi -nifi))M>-jpn IS
Powder
When used right. makes you
immune to bodily suffering by
immediately relieving offensive
perspiration, chafing,
itching, smarting of all kinds,
especially Infected and catarrhal
conditions of the genital
organt. gun burn, prickly beat,
perspiring and painful feet, sweaty odor under
the arms, scratching, burns, cuts, wounds,
ulcers, etc.
Write for our valuable little booklet and a
sample of Tyree's Powder Jree. gold by all reliable
druggists, or direct by mall for twentyfive
cents.
J. g. TVREE, ChmmM, Waehingfon, 0. C.
BILLS
Mourlal Balk a Ipaatalty.
_ BELLS.
KSviSSr
THE PRESBYTERIi
| For The Farm j
FROM REAPING HOOK TO HINDER.
A Harvest Carnival with a Display of
Ancient and Modern Methods for
Gathering the Wheat Crop.
Hy Edwin L. Darker, of I. H. C. Service
Bureau.
A great day was Saturday, July 8.
It was a day in which the interests of
children, parents, grandparents, and
great grandparents were strangely intermingled.
It was a day tilled with
pleasure, and historical and educational
values?a vivid, striking contrast of
the time that was with the time that is.
It marked the advance from much labor
and little gain to less labor and more
gain for the farmer. It is at a harvest
carnival such as this that we of the
present are given a bitter-sweet taste
of the past, and are set to counting our
many blessings.
It was fitting that such a carnival
should have been staged near De Kalb,
in Illinois, for it was here that C. W.
Marsh wrought the Marsh harvester, the
link between the self-rake reaper and
the modern binder. Mr. Marsh was present,
hale and hearty at the age of seventy-seven.
The manufacture of the
Marsh harvester caught the interest of
William Deering, whose capital and energy
later were to assist in the evolution
of the Deering machines and a perfect
binder twine.
The idea of the carnival belongs to
Henry 0. Whitmore and T. L. Oakland,
two pioneer Illinois farmers who live
midway between De Kalb and Sycamore.
The event smacked somewhat of an
old settlers' meeting. All visitors under
sixty were regarded as children. What
does a man of fifty know of the world's
progress in the methods of harvesting?
Nothing. He is a child?an infant. When
one of these youngsters would try his
hand at swinging a cradle, the crowd
wouia yen: ".book out! Don't cut your
legs off!" And occasionally the warning
came just in time.
The oldest, and one of the best cradlers
has just slipped over into his ninety-second
year. If some of his friends
had not stopped him, this cradle expert?"Uncle
Billy" Allen, they called
him?would have cradled the entire
acre of wheat that he might put on
record every one of his ninety odd years
as a year of youth, and also, that though
long idle, he had not lost the art of
cradling.
Believe me or not, cradling is an art?
soon to be numbered among the lost
arts. We are not Borry to lose this art,
since we have a better way?even "Uncle
Billy" said so?but it is good to resuirect
it now and then, if for no other
reason than to remind us of the words
that were truer then than now, "Man
shall earn his bread in the sweat of his
face."
Many varieties of cradles were
brought from their hiding places to be
used at the Whitmore and Oakland
farms. And their names came with them
?"Morgan," "Grapevine," and "Turkeywing."
First came the reaping hook. After
watching it cut a few sheaves of wheat
_ _ _ ???.?j 4. _ a iv. ik - ahaJIa
vuo ucttueu iu wouuer iuai uic wiouic
was once hailed as a great Invention.
One of McCormick's flrat reapers, which
required a man to walk alongside of it
and rake off the grain, could not be
obtained. Had one of these reapers
Sore Eye*
Are cured without pain in one day by
Leonardl's Golden Eye Lotion. There
la no other eye remedy so soothing,
healing, prompt and effective. It makes
strong eyes.
Guaranteed or money refunded. Druggists
sell it at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid
on receipt of price by S. B. Leonardl
& Co., Tampa, Fla.
IN OF THE SOUTH
Maryville College coupon
* P units reqt
~ Four-year
Ing department. Earnets Christian atmo
buildings. Thirty-nine instructors and 6
a year. Board in the Co-operative Club,
for catalogue to Rev. Clinton H. Gillinghi
STOCK IN
Georgia Mortgage & Ti
Confines Its Investments to Mortgag
Improved Real Estate. A conservativ
profitable investment. 50 Shnres for sal<
\r O matter how tenc
IN hard you are to fit,
tt will give your feet ?
Q pinching shoes you
K are comfortable from the first i
11 sole gently yielding to every bei
| they are the essence of style anc
a BRAND" shoes always fit best i
i they are made right, by expert
K modern and completely equippc
j\ STATES. Insist on having *
I dealer has them, or can get the
J TO MERCHANTS: Put in a
I display them in your windows and wt
1 increase. We want to send a salesm
V us know when. Mail orders filled s
? M. C. KISER CO
1/ Manufacturers of
j "SHIELD BRUNO" SHI
L ATLANTA, GEORG
The Rural Mail 0
The telephone
neighbors, friends ar
of every day. Prog
out the South are install
homes and connecting wit
cost is low; the service is s
Write today to the
Manager for pamphlet, or
Farmers' Line Depa
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AN!
8 SOUTH PRYOH STREET.
?1
[August 16, 1911
In 1819 by the Synod of Tennessee.
ading to B. A. and B. S. degrees. Fifteen
llred for admission to Freshman Class.
preparatory department. Bible Trainsphere.
Property 8775,000. Eleven large
58 students. Coeducational. Tuition $18
$1.70 a week. Text-books rented. Write
lm, Registrar, Maryvllle, Tennessee.
j J. POPE BROWN
met fY President
V'C * Empire Life
e Ix>ana on Building,
e, safe and Atlanta,
? Oa.
mm
ssi ?
j
ler your feet, or how
our flexible sole shoes
i rest from those stiff, Qi
are now wearing. They
ninute you put them on, the V
id or movement of the foot, and 1
I superior in quality. ?SHIELD [J
and wear longest because, 11
shoe workmen, in the_most y
m snoe iactory in tfte UNITED A
SHIELD BRAND" shoes?your U
m for you. 1
line of "SHIELD BRAND" shoes. fl
itch your business ,-r~- _ f
an to ace you?let f
ame day received. (I
iMP ANY '
ill
fwilM] 1
^MSllKy A
_ ?
lines uncc a Day
r keeps you in touch with
id the city every minute
;ressive farmers throughing
telephones in their
:h the Bell System. The
atisfactory.
nearest Bell Telephone
address
irtment
D TELEGRAPH CO.
ATLANTA. 6A. Q jfljliCTk I J