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PAGE TEN
CLASSIFIED
If you want to Buy, Sell or THE JEFFERSONIAN reaches 45,000 prosperous
Exchange anvthtng of Vai- Southern homes in small cities, towns and rural dis
' tricts.
ue, Advertise in the Classi- ... ~ . ... . . . _ .
lf lhere is anything you want to buy, sell or ex-
iled Columns of The Week- change you can reach these homes cheaply and ef
ly JEFFERSONIAN. “It is c Cll,ssil ’ C< ' l Co J u “ ns . J H . K
JEFFERSONIAN under any of the following head-
a Live Wire.’’ . ings:
FARM LANDS. LIVE STOCK REMEDIES.
SEED. MEDICAL.
LIVE STOCK. BUILDING MATERIAL.
PETS. REE OR POULTRY SUPPLIES.
FOR EXCHANGE. MISCELLANEOUS.
POULTRY' AND EGGS. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES.
AGENTS WANTED. OR ANY CLASSIFICATIONS YOU
CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS. MAY DESIRE.
Rates are 2 cents per word per Insertion. No advertising accepted for less
than 50 cents per insertion.
Atlanta Office, No 8 Wall Street.
Make all remittances payable to The Jeffersonian Pub. Co., Thomson, Ga.
AGENTS.
AGENTS —Send for 8 Needle Books to
sell at 25c each. Sell them out with
in 30 days and send me the $2.00 and I
will mail you a beautiful, adjustable,
bright Gold finished Bracelet for your
trouble. S. W. EVANS, Thomson, Ga.
AGENTS WANTED.
$3.00 A DAY —We don’t want a man
who can’t earn at least three dollars
a day at our work. The best and livest
canvassing proposition in the South.
Big commissions. The Jeffersonians,
Thomson, Ga.
EDUCATIONAL.
READ the Educational Department in
Watson’s Jeffersonian Magazine, and
you will learn things. A dollar a year
will give you a liberal education.
INSURANCE.
THE Georgia Home Insurance Co., of
Columbus. Ga., is nearly half a cen
tury old. It is a home institution.
“QUICK LOAN.”
$20,000 WORTH loan contracts for sale.
Quick loan. Only 6 per cent interest,
for term from one to seven and three
quarter years. First mortgage, farm or
city real estate anywhere. Address,
NATIONAL REALTY & INVESTMENT
CO., Atlanta, Ga.
MACHINERY' FOR SALE.
ONE ENGINE and boiler, 35-horse; one
Engine and Boiler, 25 horse; one De-
Loach Saw Mill, complete, No. 1; one
Drag Saw, new; one Bxl6 Fay & Egom
Flooring Machine, double surface, com
plete; one 70-Saw Pratt Gin, Standard
Feeder and Condenser, complete. All
second hand. For prices write, L. L.
Price, Toomsuba, Miss.
FOR SALE —Wheat rocks, one Smut
mill and bolting machinery, nearly
new; cheap. J. B. ADAMS, Lumpkin,
Ga.
I POSITIONS GUARANTEED
A X TE will GUARANTEE you a position if you
AiF Wfel \f\f write us real soon. We need many more stu
“•**’ W / * * dents at once to supply the enormous demand
f° r our graduates. As soon as we get the required
1 number of students this offer will be withdrawn. So
write at once for particulars.
I v y <_y
BUSINESS COLLEGE
I OfilO. W. SCHWARTZ incorporated
Prinoipai. ESTABLISHED 1804 LOUISVILLE, KY. tj
I Good Paying Positions Open 1
I for Automobile Mechanics |
We teach you how to Drive, Repair and Construct all makes of
Automobiles.
Our course is thorough and practical and can be mastered in throe
to four months. Good paying positions secured for all graduates.
Write for information.
AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL OF MECHANICS
175 to 177 West Mitchell Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA
DR, WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM
iral OPIUM and WHISKY
wnWIM! Our 30 years’ experl-
v j ence shows these diseases are curable. Patients also treat-
ed at their homes. Consultation confidential. A book on
the subject free. DR. B. M. WOOLLEY & SON, No. 3-A Vle-
tor Sanitarium, Atlanta, Ga.
THE JEFFERSONIAN
MEDICAL.
DROPSY CURED —Gives quick relief,
stops shortness of breath in 36 to 48
hours; removes swelling in 15 to 20
days. Write for particulars, testimon
ials, etc. Collum Dropsy Remedy Co.,
Dept. T, 512 Austell Building, Atlanta,
Ga.
NURSERIES.
PECANS, Fruit and Ornamental Trees,
Roses, Palms, Ferns. Write for cat
alogue. Gainesville Nurseries, Gaines
ville, Fla.
PECAN TREES.
FOR SALE —1,000 Grafted and Budded
Trees. Best varieties. Bear’s Pecan
Nurseries, Palatka, Fla.
PIGEONS FOR SALE.
A handsome lot of ten White Fantails,
four pairs in the bunch. For sale
cheap. MRS. J. D. WATSON, Thomson,
Ga.
POULTRY.
FOR SALE —S, C\ White Orpington
Eggs and Stock. W. C. STANDIFER,
Eufaula, Ala.
TOBACCO CURES.
TOBACCO HABIT CURED or no cost.
Harmless home treatment of roots
and herbs. Sure, pleasant, permanent.
Send your name quick. Ni-Ko Works
7, Wichita. Kansas.
WANTED.
FEW pupils to learn shorthand by
mail from expert stenographer, 22
years’experience. Complete course, SI.OO.
Will not interrupt your other duties.
Grandest chance of your life to study
shorthand at such a price. I make my
living from my regular position and
wish to utilize my spare time. Write
quick for information. Address P. O.
Box 459. Atlanta. Ga.
OUR POST-CARD CLUB
By DADDY JIM
LETTER FROM TEXAS.
Dear Daddy Jim: As this is my
first attempt to The Jeff, I thought
I would try my luck and see if my
letter hopped into the waste basket,
I am a Texas boy. I live in the
country on a farm with my grand
father. He thinks Air. Watson is the
greatest man in the world. I am
fourteen years old, have black hair,
blue eyes, am five feet tall. I go to
school at Dorter. I like to go to
school, if it is a good one. Ido not
like a bad school, lam in the eighth
grade. I guess all of you Cousins
had a nice Christmas. I sure did.
Old Santa Claus did not come to see
me, for lam too large. I like to go
hunting and fishing. I have one sis
ter; she is the yougest and a brother
next to myself. My mother died
about eight years ago. As my letter
is getting rather long, I will close
with best wishes to Daddy Jim and
all The Jeffs. EUGENE WILLIAMS,
White Wright, Texas, R. 3.
COTTON IN MISSISSIPPI.
Hello Daddy Jim and Cousins :
How are you all? I saw in the
P. C. C. the other day where one of
our members had a stalk of cotton
growing. Plenty of cotton grows
down here. Some of it is higher
than my head and I am five feet and
two inches tall. Suppose we leave
off asking riddles and tell about the
things that grow where we live. If
each will get a subject to write on,
the P. C. C. will be more interesting.
Some of us could fell how coal, iron,
gold, lead, silver and zinc are mined.
I will tell how cotton grows:
Along in the spring, after the
grot nd is made into rows, a horse
is hitched to a planter with a large
wheel; the seed drips through holes
in a plate and falls into the trench
which a plow, fastened to the front
has cut. Then the wheel covers
them up. Before long, a stalk with
two tiny green leaves on it, comes
up; then it blooms and the bloom
falls off, and a little boll is there.
When it opens, a hand-full of snow
white cotton is there. Then it is
picked and carried to a gin, where it
is ginned into a bale. It is then
shipped to a compress, where the
bale is made smaller. The seed
which comes out of the cotton is
made into hulls and meal. Your
Cousin, “CANDY KID”, Montpelier,
Miss.
HISTORY QUESTIONS.
Dear Daddy Jim: Here I come for
the second time. I live in the coun
try and like country life. I go to
school in town and am in the sixth
grade. lam going to ask some his
tory questions; Where was the first
Thanksgiving? What was the Ma
son and Dixon line? Name the pro
visions of the Constitution. To the
one who answers these questions, I
will send a beautiful post card. I
reckon Daddy Jim thinks I will never
leave, but I am ready right now.
Good-by, LULA WARE, Luck Hill,
Miss.
HERE’S SOMEONE YOU KNOW.
Dead Daddy Jim; Here I come
for the second time. I am a little
Georgia girl. I have black hair,
brown eyes, and am a little dark
complected. I am going to school
in Lyons, at the Lyons High School.
I am in the fifth grade, and my
teacher’s name is Miss Maude Smith.
I like her very much. While our
school was vacated for Christmas, I
spent the holidays with my grand
father in Jenkins County, near Mil
len, Ga. With best wishes to the
P. C. C. and Daddy Jim, GUSSIE
LEE AARON, LYONS, Ga.
LIKES SCHOOL.
Dear Daddy Jim; Will you admit
a little Georgia girl into your happy
band? My papa takes The Jeffer
sonian, and I like to read it. lam
seven years old, have dark lhair,
brown eyes, fair complexion* and
weigh sixty-five pounds. I am go
ing to school and like it very much.
I have a mile and a half to go. This
is my first attempt to write, and I
hope to see it in print. Your Cousin,
LILLIAN PATTERSON, Ashland, Ga
Rt. 1.
THIS IS A LONG LETTER.
Dear Daddy Jim: Here I come
for the second time. My first letter
went to the waste basket, but I hope
this one will not hop into it. Well,
I like history questions and will
answer some: Warner Blakely, the
answ’er to your first one is George
Washington. I think this is a long
letter, as I imagine I can see it in
the waste basket. Good-by, PEARL
KERSEY, Waverly Hall, Ga.
SECOND ATTEMPT.
Dear Daddy Jim.- I wil’ write to
the P. C. C. again, as I did not see
my last letter in print. I guess it
got into the waste basket. I am
going to school now, and am in the
sixth grade. We have two teachers;
the principal is Mr. C A Gresham
and the assistant is Mrs. J W Stan
ford. My studies are Grammar,
Swinton’s Word Book, Neal Element
ary Arithmetic, History of Georgia,
Frye’s Higher Geography. I will
ask some riddles: When one little
negro dies, what do all the others do?
When is a hat not a hat? I will re
main your Cousin, ROSA NELL.
MAXEY, Maxeys, Ga.
AN IRISH RIDDLE.
Dear Daddy Jim; As I saw my
letter in print, it gave me courage
to write again. I enjoy reading the
letters so much and especially the
letters of travel. I have never trav
elled very much, but I surely am anx
ious to, and intend doing so when I
get grown and then perhaps I can
visit some of you Cousins. Our
school closed just one week after
Christmas. I certainly did hate to
see it close, as I do not think that
anything will benefit a person like
an education, and I am certainly try
in to get one. I have been reading
some very nice books. How many
of you have ever read ‘At the Mercy
of Tiberius”? It is fine. As my let
ter is getting rather lengthy, I will
close with asking a riddle: “P a
part and A an art, and T a teacher
of strangers; RIC the number three,
KA king and E shall ring; L shall
lie still in its station, Y, young and
ye shall be sung all in the Trish Na
tion.” A card for the correct answer
Love to Daddy Jim and all the Cous
ins. FLOSSIE DURRANCE, Lily,
Fla.
A GEORGIA CRACKER.
Hello Daddy Jim: Here comes
that same old Bullock County Crack
er again to worry you. Well, Dad,
I hope you and the Cousins had a
nice Christmas. We sure are having
some aw’ful cold weather now. I
spent Christmas away from home
this year. I went to one Christmas
Tree and had a nice time. I got a
card from a boy Mississippi, asking
me to exchange cards with him. His
name is J. Kelly Neal. I would an
swer it, but I don’t know his post of
fice address. I would like to hear from
him again, for I like to correspond
with Cousins. Ido like to read let
ters from boys and girls all over the
country. It is cold tonight and I
will not stay long, so good-bye,
WILLIS LANG, Blitch, Ga.
The Oxygenator has won and is
winning fame all over the civilized
world, because it has made good, and
for the simple reason that it has
cured disease and saved human life
after medical treatment utterly
failed.
Don’t you think a lot of your
Baby? Read in February Watson’s
Magazine how you can win a han
some prize.