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SSR BUYS A S9O WHITE STAR BUGGY ZJJ\
From W • o< o r-y * o You
MUffl MCU BUQGfIX TWO Having perch seed tbs far trey and ♦quip VVM
m*e< «f th* AUaata Itagpy Company, muo-
ns to tebtarroe at th* tereoea A-Ot»4« Whits Star
UHL-ig, Bceslsa. »• eov 0*1! White Star Top Bug reiidlse
' w> \ ri«* dtract te tea eotMmar at who teas Is price. *s4.<X>.
JT WHITE FOR FREE CATALOG 12-C
frE fggKp 4*o SNIFF THE DEALERS’
> ' ' \ PROFITS
Beaty dealers bar* always sold White Star Bnirxles at
► —*' BB *TB 00 to *OO.OO. By art Ung direct from fec
\ / / tary ** ?*'• from 815.00 to 840 00.
X.J >< /
GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO. 32-34 Means St.. Atlanta, Ga
AGRICULTURALIFV
Q=;„ Education
Successnn. 1
$ A NW)EV M-
FAs* department trill cheerful.’;/ endeacoi to jumish any information,
l.etteri thould ba addreeeed to Dr. Andrew M. Soule, president State
; AprtcuUural" College, Athene, Go.
How the University Helps Its Constituency
PART 11. , t
In every state university there should
be an extension bureau so organised
and officered that it will be possible for
it to give, in a desirable and concrete
form, the information needed by the
residents of any community. This
work need not be confined of necessity
to agricultural lines, though more
progress tn this direction has been
made than in any other, and it is natu
rally the most pressing and important
need of the day. This is due to the
fact that technical education has long
outstripped agricultural education be
cause we have rested too long in the
false security of "a virgin soil incapa
ble of exhaustion.’* Now that we are
confronted by new problems in agricul
ture which are of national importance,
it has become necessary to call upon
the universities for active aid through
their colleges of agriculture in the
more general distribution of the accum
ulated facts of science relating to soils,
plants and animals. A gratifying re
sponse has been made by our institu
tions, many of them having been liber
ally endowed by the state for work of
this character. As a result, the yield
of corn for an entire state has been
raised considerably, the yield of cotton
increased, the character of the live
stock improved, progress made in the
teaching of agriculture in the rural
schools and succor given to many co
operative enterprises which might oth
erwise have languished and died. Only
a beginning has been made, but what
is to be achieved through the systema
tised extension Or traveling agricul
tural school, the well-ordered farmers’
institute, the test plat and demonstra
tion field, the physical-chemical soil
survey of a state, the rational manage
ment of forest plantations, the intro
duction and dissemination of improved
seeds and planta the breeding of a bet
ter and more varied class of live stock,
-the eradication of parasitic insects and
diseases of plants and animals, the re
organised rural school, the correspond
ence course and the personal letter, I
leave to some one with a more vivid
imagination than I possess. *To say that
the Uvea of the people will be mate
rially influenced, industry benefited,
agriculture transformed, inspiration
succeed depression, and rural life and
Its opportunities become more gener
ally and thoroughly appreciated is cer
tainly stating the case circumspectly.
■g||l Riffes, Shotguns and Ammunition M&
For All Kinds Os Shooting VFN
IlWfflffi In selecting your fall shooting equipment, don’t make the mistake of
> buying goods that nvr prove unreliable. By getting Winchester rifles, «
shotguns and ammunition, you will be sure of having an equipment
■ IJa that will give you entire satisfaction. Winchester guns and ammuni
fea tion have an established reputation for reliable and accurate shooting
ra&ug and all-around worth. Whatever may be true of other makes, there is
not the slightest doubt that Winchester goods will prove equal to every
■ jKM occasion. Winchester rifles and shotguns are made in sizes suitable
|MBKJ for shooting any kind of game, and Winchester cartridges and loaded
SO* J shotshells are made for every kind of firearm. Roosevelt, Peary,
Whitney and other renowned hunters always use Winchester guns
and ammunition, as they are convinced of their worth for all kinds of
B&l shooting- The example of such experienced men is a safe one to follow.
FREE : — Send postal to Winchester Repeating Anns Co., WjjKjK|
New Haven, Conn., for complete illustrated catalog.
The Chosen Equipment Os Successful Hunters,
Extension teaching affords the univer
sity the greatest constructive oppor
tunity it has ever enjoyed. Daniel
Webster says that “soul conservation
is the greatest service which can be
rendered mankind.” Soul conservation
may oftener come through the adjust
ment of material conditions than we
sometimes think. Webster’s advice, as
given below, is certainly worth cher
ishing in this connection:
“If we work upon marble, it will
perish; if we work upon brass, time
will efface it; if we rear temples, they
will crumble into dust; but if we work
upon immortal souls, if we imbue them
with principles, with the just fear of
God and love of fellow-men, we engrave
on those tablets something which will
brighten all eternity.”
An endeavor has been made to set
forth succinctly some phases of the rise
and spread of university ideals, and to
briefly portray the influence which they
have exerted on civilization. In Amer
ica a peculiar type of college has grown
up, which we now correctly term the
state university. It is capable of un
limited service to every state in which
it has been properly established and
wisely directed, protected from outside
interference and liberally financed. The
university should stand in every well
ordered commonwealth as a beacon
light placed on a hilltop, where it can
not be hid, and casting its effulgent
rays over the entire state. It should
exert a wholesome influence at the cen
ter of luxury, in the counting house, in
the factory, on the farm, in the home
of the grandee and the humblest citizen
alike. It constitutes the melting pot in
which all the problems of the state are
to be fluxed and the dross separated
from the refined material which is to
give vitality to commerce, permanency
to industry and agriculture, and happi
ness and contentment to all the people.
The university has been likened by
some to an engine, and in fancy let us
weave a comparison between the two.
The engine has a framework to give it
stability; the university has a physical
equipment of grounds and buildings.
The engine has a fire box, in which its
energy is generated; the university has
a laboratory, out of which comes the
refined truths that make for intellec
tual development and mastery over ma
terial things. The engine has a steam
chest, where the pressure is exerted
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA. GA.. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1912.
STEAM CHEST EXPLODES
ON 0. S. TOfIPEOD BOAT
Lieutenant Morrison Killed and
Eight Men on Destroyer
Walke Badly Injured
By Associated Frees.)
NEWPORT. R. 1.. Oct. I.—Lieut.
, Donald P. Morrison was killed and
i eight men were injured today by the
’ explosion of the steam chest on the
I
’ torpeylo boat destroyer Walke. The ac
cident occurred off Brenton’s reef light-
I ship while the Walke was preparing
, for her second quarterly trial. Lieu
| tenant Morrison entered the service
l from Missouri in 1902.
The seriously injured were:
Lieut Robert L. Montgomery, of the
destroyer Fanning; E. B. Crawford,
I gunner’s mate of the destroyer Patter
son, the umpires named to watch the
tests, and the following members of
the Walke’s crew:
J. W. Rumps, machinist mate, first
class; H. L. Wilder, machinist mate,
first class; D. S. Kelly, chief machinist
mate; J. Delaney, first class fireman;
W. E. Kraus, oiler, and F. B. Conway,
oiler.
The Walke was in company of other
destroyers when the forward end of
the port turbine, together with the
steam chest, was blown off.
Lieutenant Morrison, chief engineer
officer on b oard was instantly killed,
and the others were badly scalded.
Signals were at once hoisted for as
sistance.
The destroyers Perkins, Sterrett and
Mayrant, immediately went to the as
sistance of the Walke, which steamed
back into the harbor and ran alongside
the hospital ship Solace. The wounded
men were transferred.
that gives it momentum; the university
has the trained mind of yesterday and
today, which has stored the lore and
i logic of past generations, and spurs
the receptive mind of youth on to
I achievement. The engine has a con
: necting rod, which co-ordinates its
I parts and makes possible the transmis-
I sian of its power; the university has a
student body associating it to the state
and the agencies which it represents.
The engine has a balance wheel; the
university has its faculty. The engine
has its governor, so that it may not
escape from under proper control; the
university has its body of alumni, ex
erting the wholesome influence of the
educated man in society.
Thus we see a correlated and interde
pendent relation between the university
and ail the activities of the life of the
commonwealth. We look upon the en
gine which is constructed of man’s imagi
nation assisted by the culture of his in
tellect and the interpretation of nature's
laws as a giant achievement. It is
the feeble tool of conception. How much
more marvelous and wonderful is a uni
versity which caters to the interest, spih
itual and material, of the human mind
and body. The engine represents but one
I of the achievements which education has
i made possible: the university represents
l the present development and success at-
I tending man’s effort in all lines of human
■ activity. The university brings succor
and comfort to the weary and to the
heart-worn because it places him in touch
with the experience, knowledge and ma
terial needs through the acquirement of
knowledge in its physical, chemical,
economic,' agricultural and other indus-
I trial laboratories. Man is confronted by
I a sudden problem which threatens his
1 existence. The university through the
benign Influence of research and the
reaction upon human intellect tells him
how to "find away around or over the
SATS WILSON'S VOTE WILL
BL MORE THAN OPPONENTS
Montgomery Man Declares
Jersey Governor Will Re
ceive 400 Electoral Votes
Dispatch to The Journal.)
MONTGOMERY, Ala., Oct. 1.-—Wood
row Wilson will receive 400 electoral
votes and will get a larger popular vote
than Taft and Roosevelt combined, ac
cording to John D. McNeel. w’ho return
ed to Montgomery’ yesterday after
spending several weeks at Democratic
headquarters at New York and Chicago.
Mr. McNeel believes that ’ Wilson
would win if there were only one candi
date against him. He thinks that if
Roosevelt were not in the race the Dem
ocratic nominee would receive 60 per
cent of the votes that the former presi
dent will get and with Taft out of the
contest would get 75 per cent of the
votes that will go to Taft.
Only eight or ten states are placed in
the doubtful column by Mr. McNeel,
among them being Illinois, Wisconsin,
Minnesota, Vermont, New Hampshire.
Massachusetts, Washington, Oregon and
California. He believes some of the
New England states will go for Taft and
that Roosevelt will get Illinois and Wis
consin. If these states do not vote for
the respective candidates he declares
that Wilson will get the electoral votes.
He thinks Taft is stronger than Roose
velt in Minnesota, but believes the
state will go for Wilson if not for Taft.
Three states, Washington, Oregon and
California, are regarded as being equally
divided between Taft and Roosevelt.
"Most of the people with whom I came
in contact, think Roosevelt will receive
a larger vote than Taft,” stated Mr. Mc-
Neel, "and I rarely ever heard a sug
gestion of Wilson's defeat. The people
In New York and Chicago are confident
that the Democrats will win in the No
vember election.” He stated that the
vote between Roosevelt and Taft de
pends largely upon the next five weeks
of campaigning.
Mr. McNeel will probably return to
Chicago the latter part of the week,
where he will remain until the early
part of November. He is organizing the
business men of Chicago for Wilson and
Marshall.
Gen. Bibb Graves, who has been sta
tioned at New York headquarters, will
probably return to the north this week
to continue his work in the campaign,
difficulty. The university Inspires, en
courages mental and physical enjoyment,
gives balance and sobriety to society,
and maintains a desirable equilibrium
in cosmic affairs. In enlarges human
sympathy, represents the bands of knowl
edge, encourages and rewards conscien
tious effort and stands as a monitor beck
oning to mankind and urging him for
ward to measure up through the cultiva
tion of his intellectual faculties to the
opportunities which human life offers
and which a divine and considerate Cre
ator intended he should enjoy.
In conclusion. What can picture more
clearly the university ideal than the fol
lowing beautifully expressed concept by
Henry Timrod: 4 .
"Where sleeps th* poet who shall fitly
sing
Tue source wherefrom doth spring
That mighty commerce which, confined
To the mean channels of no selfish mart,
Goes out to every shore
Os this broad earth, and throngs the sea
with ships
That bear no thunders; hushes hungry
lips
Tn alien lands;
Joins with a delicate web remotest
stands;
And gladentng rich and poor,
noth gild Parisian domes,
Or feed the cottage smoke of English
homes
And only bounds its blessings by man
kind.” x
• • •
PARALYSIS IN HOGS.
J. C. J., Greenbush, Ga„ writes: I
have a hog that drags its hind parts.
Sometimes it gets up but falls down
again. I have given stock powders
and strychnine but they do no good.
Would like to have a remedy for it.
The paralysis to which you refer
may be due to one of several causes,
and it is impossible to mention any one
specifically. Troubles of this charac
ter Are often due to improper feeding
and to the fact that the animals be
come weak and unthrifty from one of
various causes. Possibly you have
been feeding <jn corn alone. If so,
abandon its use and feed a mixture of
shorts and mill feed with ground corn
and digester tankage. Use mill feed
and corn in equal parts and for each
100 pounds of the mixture ad 4 to 6
pounds of digester tankage. Yoy , may
find it some what difficult to secure
digester tankage but this is the best
material which can be used in combi
nation with the grains mentioned for
a trouble of this kind. If you have
been feeding slops which contain
broken pieces of glass and dishes, or
sand soap, lye or other materials fre
quently used about the household for
cleansing kitchen utensils abandon its
use altogether. Keep the animal in a
warm, clean, dry pen and give nutri
tious diet. Rub the loins with a lini
ment composed of equal parts of tur
pentine and sweet oil. This may be
done dally but care should be taken
not to blister the parts. If this treat
ment does no affect a cure, It is prob
able that the trouble has become chron
ic and it is doubtful if anything can
be done.
• • •
ROPEY MILK.
C. K. L., Marlon, S. C writes. 1
have a fine Jersey cow and her milk
has been ropey and thick for one or
two weeks. The cream is more so than
the milk. I feed her on cotton seed
meal and corn meal and let her graxe
on green grass. Would like to know
the cause and the remedy.
Trouble of this character mentioned
in your letter is often observed in
heavy milking cows or those which are
fed largely on highly nitrogenous
foods, such as cotton seed meal and
com meal. You are probably feed
ing an overproportion of grain to the
needs pf the cow. We would suggest
that you cut the ration down material
ly, probably eliminating the cotton seed
meal altogether for a week or ten days
and substitute bran for the same. Use
equal proportions of bran and corn, or
bran oats and shorts. Then provide
some green feed in addition to the pas
ture if you can secure any. Freshly
cut sorghum or peas or velvet beane
will be found excellent for this pur
pose. You should take great care to
milk the udder out very thoroughly
several times a day. and disinfect all
utensils used in and about the stable,
i The hands of the milker should also
ibe carefully cleansed, and the udder
I washed off carefully before and after
milking. Antiseptic injections into the
udder through the teats after milking
will often be foqnd very helpful. lodo
form in the water is especially recom
mended, or you njay use any of the
111 Name
n Get Within Talking Distance '
I of Your Neighbors \
■ A Western Electric Telephone gives solid satisfac- \ Bookie
tion pleasure. It’s like having all your best friends £
I next door to you—keeps away that lonesome feeling by s \
■ making a friendly chat possible day or night. \
I . Western-fitcfric I
fcigkM Rural Telephones
are a big help to the Business Farmer —the ■
Mk Cii man "ho wants highest prices for his produce—
lb'A Mail cannon far illuatratad book tailing
If/ J *••• *• bail J a cornglata telephone Una.
F ' !\\ WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY 1
L * V 'j ( 1 Manufacturara of the 9,000.000 "Ball ” Telcghanca
K J. liU ’ll ' SOUTHERN HOUSES:
wk vSlllr Hl II ’I Atiaata Oklahoma City Dallas Kansas City H
Hin V Ciachmotl Savannah Richmond Houston St Louis |j
EQUIPMENT FOR EVERY ELECTRICAL NEED
coal tar products. The proportion
should be one to 50 or 100 parts of
water. This treatment if persisted in
should affect a .cure.
• * ♦
HORSE WITH RINGBONE AND CALF
WITH SCOURS.
J. M. K., Englewood, Tenn., writes: I
have a horse with a ringbone on his
left foot just above the hoof. I also
have one with swollen legs. I also
have a fine Jersey’ calf about three
months old that has had the scours
ever since it was about two weeks old.
Would like to know what to do for
these animals.
The treatment of ringbone is difficult
and often unsatisfactory. . Preventive
treatment is important. Tn young ani
mals keep them well nourished and
trim the hoof carefully. Proper shoe
ing. so as to prevent an abnormal
strain on the ligaments, is a very im
portant matter. Sometimes ringbone
may be cured by ringbone directed to
wards straightening the axis of the
foot If inflammation ts persistent, a
sharp blister of blniodide of mercury
and cantharides is good. Allow the an
imal rest for several days. If this
fails, "firing” in two or three lines over
the ringbone may be a help. If the
animal is a valuable one, you should
employ a veterinarian. Moderate feed
ing, with plenty of exercise, given uni
formly, will probably relieve the swell
ings to which you refer.
The trouble with your calf is proba
bly due to some indiscretion in feed
ing or to the rapid bolting of the food.
It is important to examine into the
quality and character of the food fed,
and see that it is all flrstclass, and
also that the buckets used in feeding
are thoroughly disinfected. A good di
gestive tonic is the following: Glauber
salts, two pounds; common salt, one
pound; baking soda, one-half pound.
Give a half teaspponful in each feed.
* • •
SICK COW.
J. F. A., Logansville, Ga., writes: I
have a cow that has been sick off and
on all summer. Sbe apparently has hol
low horn. I have bored her horns, but
it seems to do no good. She does not
give much milk, and at times will not
eat Would it be all right to cut her
horns off?
The horns of all animals of the cattle
tribe are hollow, the horns being
elongations of the frontal bones of the
skull. When the cow is sick the horn
often shows evidence of fever. Some
times they are cold, which indicates an
impaired circulation of the, blood.
These symptoms should be regarded,
however, solely in the light of constl-
B Low
® Fares!
On the Ist and 3rd Tuesdays
of each month the fare* are
extra low—and allow. *top
over* free and 25 day* time—
via Cotton Belt Route to
Arkansas
& Texas
J&b The Cotton Belt Route is the
direct line from Memphis to
Texas, through Arkansas
two splendid trains daily, with
W; through sleeper*, chair cars and
parlor-case cars. Trains from
¥& all part* of th* Southeast make
direct connection at Memphis
TP. with Cotton Belt Route trains
» to the Southwest.
Write to me today
I will tell you exact fare
from your town, sched
ule, and send you splen
did illmtrated books of
W. farm facts about Arkan
sat and Texas.
_m L. P. SMITH,
HE’NhFm Travelinc P«»»en»rr A«at
Bk . MKI 2028 First Avnnu*
Birmingham, Ala.
All year Tourist ; '
Tickets also on
sale Daily to cor- ?
talnpeintsinTox
as. 80-ders limit.
Stingles Bees
Has Arrived
(By Aisdciated Brass.)
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. I.—The sting
less bee at last has arrived, having
been produced by an Englieh apiarist
named Burrows. A description of the
new bee says the hybrids are splendid
workers, and are less liable to disease
than the ordinary honey producers.
Burrows mated cyprian drones with
Italian queens, to produce the new
bee.
tutional disorder. The boring of the
horns will not relieve sickness as some
have thought, and you have amply
demonstrated this to your own satis
faction. Boring the horns of a sick
cow and pouring in turpentine, as is
often practiced, is not only useless, but
cruel, and may sometimes set up acute
inflammation. No doubt the discharge
from the horns Is due to the fact that
they have become Infected in some way.
It will not be objectionable to cut the
horns off rather close to the head with
a good sharp saw. The animal should
be held firmly. We believe, after cut
ting off the horns, if you will give a
dose of one pound of glauber salts dis
solved in a quart of linseed tea and
one pint of molasses, you will find the
treatment helpful. You should give
a laxative, easily digested diet, and only
moderate amounts of food should be
given for some little time. Do not
feed exclusively on meal and hulls,
as these are heavy concentrated foods.
A heaping teaspoonful of the following
combination may be grvten three times a
day: Carbonate of lime, four ounces:
fine ground bone, one pound; powdered
gentian, four ounces; common salt,
eight ounces; powdered fenugreek, four
ounces. These materials should be
thoroughly mixed.
CASTOR IA
for Iftfints and Children.
Hu Kind Ymi Han Alwap Bmght
ms nsiirrwro rssri* will bring y»U *
D fiMIfCTQ [Dtt new 38 l *’ Feather Bed.
BLHNntlorKtt«
Only New Live Feathers used, best A. C.
A. Ticking. Satisfaction guaranteed or
money back. X'rompt shipment. Sit down
and order now, and order this special offer.
Agents wanted. , ,
Southern Feather & Pillow Co.,
f Dept. C., MEBANE, N. C.
Reference: Commercial A Farmers’ Bank.
min fitted with wire cable drive,. sat-out ettaen
mante aad adjustable idler. Improved carriage
backing device ie quick actlag and a,time saver.
Made in all shea, portable aad stationary.
W. BMnfsrturo .U **, boUsn, shteal* mscktess, ost<«
saws, weod .yllttersTste. sad ds fauadry stork, writs tee
prist* BSW.
HilWy a Taytor Hu Wwta. fcfL M HMM. Ifc
A ww Buys thia excellent two-boree 4
\ FARM WAGON. Complete a
r wltb Bed. Seat, Brake, Etc. T
d 7ft Buy* thle MUTUAL metal v
J ” hfeel HANDY wagon. |
x SAVB front *25.00 to *BO.OO A
F _ on your new wagon if you boy n BCT V AL. X
f .zrL. _ 3 Wr,te ud,y ,or FBEE CATALO€OS delivered prices, f
F ISmBaI MUTUAL CARRIAGE & HARNESS MFQ. CO.
A STATION 63 *. W., Bant flt. Louin, Illinois.
nd -for
n. a r.. »rr- go yg ivuuoxners e» 7-
To Make 9100 Per Month
Above Expenses
About 2000 Men
’tawieish’f MAdicinw. Extracts, Spieex. Soap*.
Teitet Articles. Stock and Pooltry Prepara
tions. Polisltea. Etc. Oar Company. Iwiwepd
ent. Competitive. Progressive. Greatmt Buy
ing. Manufacturing. Distributing and Soling
iJtgnniaatian in North Ajnsnca. makes largest
and most etnnpiete Hns, all sold direct to f arta
»ra. Established 18 years. Capital and Re
soatcee aver *2.000.000- Big branch *•**"
houses at Memphis, Tenn., and Chester. Pa.,
make low freight rates and owiek Mrviee to all
eastern and southern states- Big new factory
at Winnipeg. Manitoba, offers a rich field, with
prectiealry no competition, for men selling
our Products tn Canada. Total floor space m
faetorfee and warehouses over 10 a«re«-
We Mew
-rias So teraMrs aad otkam trvm • wsson MyUar te ths
ons la UMrt s asm aMs to tek. Ml stort*.U
ssWrtbtes asrteiarar to ~ Swtesw la Ma 4MmS- Ba*
-wry ma« eaa M th>i settee aor cka vs rfort *» Sto
tssetviw <MM wks Ute* wtrarastert w tea *M sr teo
•oner W» vsat to teser Cun »*■ vto have bass ts,rly
b-av*. tadesOtea* »« wfc® v«l ba ratwSad
to vnk* ns* teas flwn
SIOO Per month Clear Profit
.r-r. SSPMMS tea test ysar. «1»O0 tbs ss<vnd vs»r.
•»« 12400 tes Shwi jesr
If rai srs talrU wsfl Mouairitsd in raat Ur-ahto sad
>Kkak y»a tbs txwteoa. less a. Ums ta snMnr 4»
raprtly all vsjne*
terrtearr. We <to ne* vnru to hear from men *n<OT SI M
-isnr »* rears of ace. Tr. ro* lha pnelUen a ma* as* be
sMe to fwraste ler J berms to roaSato tee basroeM aieo
read baoness men as rgerenres If r»o
tome remiiroawav te nM srrlto; ts roa eaa meat Ssei.
rrrtto W rrossashe toes tos are tookiaefor The pumven
r«n Mr. U hoaerable an* P -nnas>eat.
Thfl W. T. Rawleleh Medical Company
e-osTtas cHssnnra - M*surncT<»aene
90 aprtoflJL
FOR SALE
Bu y a Good Farm or a
Timber Tract i n
South Georgia
Write today for my booklet of
‘‘One Hundred Farms and Timber-
Tracts for Sale,” in the banner
counties of Thomas, Brooks,
Grady, Decatur and Mitchell.
Large tracts, small tracts, improv
ed or unimproved, fine level sandy
loam and red pebbly land with
red clay subsofl, labor abundant,
best roads in Georgia, best cotton
lands in the South, good neigh
borhoods, schools and churches,
pure freestone and artesian wa
ter, plenty hog and hominy, saw
mill timer, turpentine locations,
cut-over lands, colonization lands,
fine stock raising section, city
city property paying 10 per cent
and over.
Write me what you want and I
vill answer by early mail describ
ing the property which you want.
Yours to serve,
• W. E. CRAIGMILES.
Thomasville, Georgia.
5