Newspaper Page Text
THE AiUAMTA sisjvu-WEEKLT JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1913.
Feed lour Crops Available Potash
S Insoluble plant foods are cheap in the beginning but may be dear in the end..
’e feel good when we hear that the soil contains enough Potash to raise 5000
ops, but we feel tired when we discover that it will take 1000 years or so to make
it available. We will be converted into plant food ourselves long before that.
The acids derived from green manure may
make insoluble phosphate of lime more avail
able. But the fcldspathie Potash in the soil
is less soluble in these acids than in the
0 . . . .... , slightiy alkaline waters of the best soils. A
little soil Potash becomes available yearly, but not enough to provide for profitable crops.
Crops have two periods ot Potash hunger. One just after germination and the other
when starch formation is most rapid-when,the grain is filling. Rational fertilization
giqujres ample available Potash at these periods and if you provide it you will find that
Potash Pays* Send for our pamphlet on making fertilizers.
German Kali Works, Inc., 42 Broadway, New York
Monatoock Block, Chicago Ill Bank & Trust Bldg., Savannah, Ga.
Whitney Bank Bldg,. New Orleans. La, Empire Bldg,,. Atlanta, Ga.
POTASH
ADDITIONAL FARM NEWS
(Continued from Page 6.)
of 14 per cent blood and 100 pounds
of muriate of potash. In this instance
you would have to use 300 pounds of a
filler or pursue the method of division
indicated above. Of course, if desirable
you may substitute 100 pounds of ni
trate of soda for the blood mentioned
in this formula. A third formula which
will give you a 9-3-4 is 1,100 pounds of
acid phosphate, 200 -pounds of 14 per
cent blood, 200 pounds of cotton seed
meal, and 500 pounds of kainit.
A 10r3-4 may. be prepared by mixing
1.190 pounds of acid phosphate, 125
pounds of nitrate of soda, 125 pounds
of blood, 400 pounds of cotton seecl
meal and 160 pounds of muriate of pot
ash. Of course,* in all instances the
material should be of the highest grade.
It would be very difficult to prepare a
10-3-4 formula and use as low a grade
of material as kainit to supply as much
potash as you desire in this formula.
Of course, these figures are not accu
rate to the ^decimal point, but they are
sufficiently reliable to serve all practical
purposes.
• * *
a Tobacco grower s problems.
E. O. -F., Haleyville, Ala., writes: Will
new ground make very good tobacco?
Tell me something about the cultiva
tion of tobacco, and about the right time
to sow the seed and how much and
what kind of fertilizer to use? The land
IS THE BOLL BIG ENOUGH
EARLIEST VARIETY KNOWN
“M on 9 MONTHS’ TIME”
This shows our faith in the SEED
Let mo send you “LIFE SIZE*’ pholos
showing bolls and limbs also reports from farmers in
your State, showing Earliness and Productiveness of
this “wonder” cotton. Seed (rowir in North
Carolina. Have car lot in each state, .so be quick
i f yon want a few “Sample Bags- 1 from point
nearest you at Insignificant cost, freight paid,
T. J. KING, Richmond, va.
is dark sandy loam with red clay sub
soil and a litle rolling-. What va
rieties should I plant?
There is no crop influenced so ex
tensively by the character of , soil as
tobacco. Heavy lands are used chiefly
for the production of Burley and other
dark heavy tobaccos. New ground of
a dark sandy loamy character should
be well adapted for the production of
a wrapper tobacco of the type grown in
some sections of Virginia and North
Carolina. Tobacco requires heavy fer
tilization. Suppose you mix 300 pounds
acid phosphate, 50 pounds of nitrate of
soda, 400 pounds of cotton seed meal
and 150 pounds of high-grade sulphate
of potash together and apply to each
acre. The fertilizer should be put under
tjie drill row and well mixed with the
subsoil. Do not use either muriate of
potash or kainit as these potash carriers
contain so much chlorine that; they af
fect, unfavorably the burning qualities
and other properties of the tobacco. The
nitrogen supply of tobacco should be
derived chiefly from organic sources,
through nitrate of soda in moderate
amounts mqy be used, as has been sug- ;
gested above. Tobacco requires a very
friable and. clean soil. You should
spare no effort, therefor, ine getting the
seed bed in an ideal condition. The
seeds of tobacco are so minute that
about five million are required to make a
pound. It is necessary to germinate
and start the young plants in a specially
prepared seed bed. Well-drained spots
Sheltered on the north are usually best .
The seed bed should be convenient to
water. It is generally best established
in a fairly open piece of woods where
plenty of sunshine will he obtained.
Spade up the soil and destroy any weeds
or roots found therein. /Bake off the
surface and secure a uniformly fine
tilth. In many sections the seed bed
is burned over, but this is not a desir
able practice. About twenty pounds of
nitrate of soda may be applied to each
100 square yards of surface. Some pot
ash and phosphorus may also be used.
A complete formula should he scattered
over the .surface of the 'ground and cov
ered lightly. Protect at night irith a
frame over which cotton cloth is drawn.
The purpose of the canvas is to retain
the heat, and hasten germination. The
cloth should be removed a few days
FOR SALE
500-Acre Plantation good seven-
room dwelling, eight tenant
houses, three barns, ginhouse, etc.
On railroad, near school and
churches; well watered, and now
renting for 20 bales cotton. Fifty
acres of fine kaolin clay and only
15 acres waste land. Good land.
$10,000; terms.
.C. G. HARDEMAN, Macon, Ga.
BIG
MONEY
IN
CABBAGE
By ueing our C>pen Air and Hardy Frost
Proof Cabbage Plants.
Our plants are large and stocky, and
free of nut grass. They will stand low
temperatures and make head*? Satisfac
tion or 1 money refunded. Full count in
earh box
Jersey and Charleston Wakefield. Succession
and Drumhead. 500 for 75c; 1.000 for SJ.25;
5.000 for S5: 10.000 for $9. Order today
the best Frost Proof Cabbage plants on the
market from
The Dixie Plant Co. Hawkinsville, Ga.
Fish Bite
Like Hungry Wolves. Fill your Nets
Traps or Trot Lines if you bait with
MAGIC-FISH-IaUKE.
Best bait ever used for attracting
11 kinds of fisb. Write for price
list to-dav and get a box to help
introduce it. Agents wanted.
J. F. GREGORY,
Dept. 2, St. Louis, Mo.
LEDBETTER "ONE SEED" PLANTER
Plants peanuts, large or small, shelled or unshelled;
also corn, cotton, peas, etc., with certainty and regu
larity. Less seed, larger crops. Write for booklet. 832
*hc SOUTHERN PLOW COMPANY. Dallas. Texas
Marvel Fish Hooks
,, a every fish that tries to take the bait.
5*^/ Write for free hooks to help introduce.
MARVEL HOOK CO., Dejt. 51, CLINTON. IOWA
BRANCH’S .GENUINE RATTLESNAKE
WATERMELON SEED
ONLY PURE STRAIN Carefully selected. Kept pure
IHWTE^TATCS forty years. No other variety
grown on plantation of 1500 acres.
Pure seed impossible where different kinds are
grown, loz. 15c—2 oz..25c—4 oz. 40c—i lb. 60c,
1 lb. $1.00—5 lbs. $4.50—10 lbs. $8.50 delivered.
Remit registered letter or money order. Send for
Seed Annual. Manual on melon culture with all
orders. M. 1. BRANCH, Berzelia, Columbia County, Ceorgia.
Hitch a Taylor Saw Mill onto a Tay
lor Engine and your outfit will saw
more logs, keep going better and
MAKE MORE MONEY FOR YOU
than any sawmill on earth. You ought
to know about our wire cable drive, ad
justable idler and time-saving carriage-
backing device; all sizes and prices.
Write now for catalog.
Mallary Machinery Company
Dept. I, MACON, OA.
Saw Mills, Engines, Shingle
Machines, Gasoline Engines
GROW MORE ,
SWEET POTATOES
AND LESS COTTON
Slips $1.50 thousand. Draws $1.50 M. Send
for booklet.
C. W. Woughtcl
Sweet Potato Specialist, Homeland, Ga.
SEED SWEET POTATOES
SOUTHERN QUEEN, rizht size for bedding,
$1.00 per bushel. S. D. RIEGEL, & SONS,
EXPERIMENT, GA.
HITE’S PROLIFIC COTTON SEFD
A justly celebrated variety—very prolific and yielding 40 per cent lint. From 1 to
2% bales cotton per acre with application 1,000 pounds fertilizer may be raised where
climatic conditions are favorable.
It fruits better than any other variety. I recommend it to the up-to-date farmer.
A limited quantity of seed for sale. Price $1.00 per bushel f.o.b. Augusta.
G. H. NIXON, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Sunbeam Cotton Seed,
Resistant Xo Anthracnose,
from cotton producing bale to acre. This wonderful cotton -originated and perfected by
Prof. R. J. H. DeLoach of the State College. It is early, prolific, big boll, yielding high
In lint. My stock secured from State College. Can furnish carefully selected seed, ginned
on private gin at $1.50 per bushel. 10 bushels, $1.25. 20 bushels or more’$1.00 per bu.
Prices F. 0. E., Meda, Ga.
JOHN T. DENNIS, Jr., Elberton, Ga.
POWERFUL AIR RIFLE ing parts of the best grades >
of steel. Th* stock (a finely polished walnut. Shoots small game. Power,
ful, accurate, durable. You can have this air rifle for distributing only 8 of our fast
ruling art pictures at 25 cents on our special offer. Everybody will take one.
FREE
IT
YOU NOTHING to try, as we take bark those you can't dispose of.
Send no money just your name and address.
PROF. G. E. RICE NOW
ENGAGED IN NEW YORK
Tenders. Resignation to State
College of Agriculture-Goes
With German Kali Works
Prof. G. E. Rice, who has been con
nected with the State College of Agri
culture for the past year, has tendered
his resignation to the institution and
accepted a position with the German
Kali works. Bast year Prof. Rice had
charge of the boys corn club work in the
Augusta district, and succeeded in es
tablishing corn clubs and holding shows
in virtually every county under his
supervision, twenty-seven eastern coun
ties being in his charge. The Augusta
corn festival, which was created from
the exhibits held in the Augusta dis
trict, was pronounced tyy Mr. I. W. Hill,
in charge of the boys corn club work in
the United States, to be one of the
finest ever held in the south. Prof J.
Phil Campbell, who is in charge of the
corn clubs and demonstration work in
Georgia, is also lavish in his praise of
Mr. Rice’s work, and expresses the hope
that the next legislature will provide
enough funds to keep men of his caliber
in the field, and regain Mr. Rice’s serv
ices. >
Mr. Rice graduated from the state col
lege in 1911, and won much distinction,
obtaining many of the most valuable
prizes offered by, the institution in va
rious lines of work. In going with the
German Kali works Mr. Rice will con
tinue in extension work as the firm is
doing considerable experimental work,
and will make extensive efforts- to bet
ter acquaint the farmers with the in
telligent use of fertilizers, and Mr.
Rice’s training fits him well for the
work. In numerous counties in the state
fertilizer tests plats will be establish
ed under Mr. Rice’s supervisioh and
there is no doubt but that he will prove
exceptionally efficient in his new work.
His headquarters will be in Atlanta.
before the plants are set in the field in
order to toughen them. Along the gulf
coast seeds* may be sown in late Janu
ary or early February, and further north
from the middle of Fehruary to 1 the first
of March. One two tablespoonfuls of
seed for each 100 square yards of bed
is about the right amount to use.
The varieties to select will be de
termined by the character of tobacco
which you desire to grow. The Blue
Pryor and Oronoke are good sorts for
the production of fillers and strips and
black wrappers. Improved Yellow Oro-
noko is good for the production of yel
low wrappers and smokers. Connecticut
seed leaf is a stalky variety used for
cigar fillers. Choice Havanna and Amer
icanized Havana are used for cigar pur
poses.
* * *
HOME MIXED FORMULAS FOR RED
LAND.
J. L., Lulu, Ga., writes: I have some
stiff red clay land. Will it pay to use
home-made guano? How much cotton
seed meal should I use? What analysis
of fertilizer would be best?
There is no reason why you should
not mix your fertilizer at home for use
on such crops as corn and cotton. If
you have a stiff red clay soil you will
probably find about an 8-3-3 satisfactory
for cotton and a 9-3-S-4 very good for
corn. We believe that the minimum ap
plication should be 300 pounds. The
fertilizer in bur judgment should be
used under the drill row and well mixed
with the soil. If you.can secure some
yard manure to mix with the subsoil
and fertilizer before planting either corn
or cotton, it will be greatly to your ad
vantage to do so, for the amount of
vegetable matter in the soil has much
to do with determining the result se
cured from the fertilizer formula. If
you will mix together 1,000 pounds of
IB per cent acid phosphate, 460, pounds
of dried blood, 120 pounds of muriate
of potash and 420 pounds of dry earth,
you will secure an 8-3-3 formula. If
you desire to use cotton seed meal in
place of the blood you may do so. In
that event you should mix together
1,000 pounds of acid phosphate, 900
pounds of high-grade cotton seed meal,
and 100 pounds of. muriate of potash.
To make a 9-3-4 you should substitute
50 to 100 pounds of nitrate of soda
for 100 pounds of cotton seed meal, us
ing the same amounts of acid phosphate
and potash as suggested above.
• * *
ONE HUNDRED BUSHELS OF CORN
PER ACRE.
C. C. H., Odessadale, Ga., writes: I
want to raise 100 bushels of corn per
acre on red land. I have the* lime ma
nure and guano, and wish to know how
and when to use the same?
Tire* first thing in producing a good
crop of corn is to see that the viand Is
properly prepared for planting by deep
plowing. If the land has not been
CowPeas
FOR SALE
Unknown White
Clay Brabham
Clay Mixed Iron
Whippoorwill
Also 20 other varieties.
Price on any quantity, de
livered any point.
ROWLAND & CO.
738 Reynolds St.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
Also Cane Seed, Soy Beans,
Velvet Beans, Peanuts and
all Field Seeds.
O. SEiTZ,
1D79
CHICACO.
I will show you how to
['make $10 to $15 every day
during your spare time.
I will put you in the tailoring
business—make you independent
—my actual business partner in your
town. You share the profits,
I furnish samples—complete outfit—
, measuring system—full instructions—
Everything Free; back you with my
own capital and experience. My gar
ments aro all union made. Express prepaid.
FREE Sample Suit
You must be the best dressed man in town
and look prosperous. I will give you the
finest tailored, made-to-mcasure man’s suit in the
latest Chicago, New York and London stylo to
wear and display for me.
Don’t send me one penny—everything
absolutely free. Write at once. Only
man wanted in a territory. Act
' -Now! Address a postal or
M.”
letter t<
to
P. W. GOODMAN, Pres.
REGAL TAILORING CO.
439 Regal Bldg., Chicago (S)
What’ll Stop
Sour Stomach?
They Act Quick and Relief Is
Almost Immediate.
There are some things so exactly
i ight that to mention them brings calm
and repose. And to use Stuart’s Dys-
pepsia Tabiets gives the stomach just
that kind of lift that makes you check
up one hundred per 6ent to the* good.
Pa! ticularly is this true with those
who suffer with sour stomach. You
feel so mean that you actually hate
yourself. And yet in a few minutes
these tablets sweeten the stomach, ar
rest unnatural fermentation, start a
powerful digestive action and prevent
the formation of gas.
They are composed of only such dl-
gestartts as are approved by the very
best physicians.
Real, live, progressive people want
to be around where the activities of
life embrace whatever circumstances
dictate. If a house party serves a
Welsh rarebit go to it. It isn’t the
easiest thing in the world to digest,
’tis true, but what of it? Stuart’s
Dyspepsia Tablets will take care of
you, keep your stomach in. control and
your dreams won’t see an army of
hobgoblins playing hobs with your
nerves. Many physicians regularly
prescribe Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets
for the stomach disorders of patients
who are ill with some constitutional
malady. They do so for the reason
that these tablets are not a patent
medicine and their composition is
known and recognized as the most
approved and most powerful of all di-
gestants.
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are ^old
and recommended by all druggists at 50c
a box.— (Advt.)
broken turn it as soon as it is in proper
physical condition to plow. Turning It
when it is wet would of course be sui
cidal at this season of the year, and
after such a heavy fall of rain we
would not advise subsoiling. After the
land has been broken scatter lime over
the surface a£ the rate, of one ton per
acre*. Use the ground raw rock. That,
offered by the company referred to in
your.letter is a very good grade accord
ing * > the analysis they have furnished
us. .We would suggest that you buy it
under a guarantee, however. You should
seek to secure a high per cent of car
bonate and a low per cent of magnesid*.
Apply the lime say, thirty days befoi^
planting the corn and harrow it into the
surface of the ground. Disk the land
and prepare a very fine friable seed
bed. Open your furrows about four
feet apart and put the manure in the
bottom at the rate of not less than five
tons per acre. Mix with this as a mini
mum 500 pounds of a formula contain
ing 9 per cent of phosphorus, 3 per cent
of nitrogen derived chiefly from organ
ic sources, and 5 per cent of potash.
Mix the manure and the fertilizer and
the subsoil thoroughly together, draw
the furrows together and plant on the
level. Aim to secure a stand where the
stalks will be about twelve inches
apart; Select the choicest type of well
selected and proljfic.seed corn you can
find. We can iHeccommend Marlboro,
Whatley and Hastings. After the corn
is up give frequent shallow cultiva
tion. The first two or three cultivations
may be with a w.eeder. The idea is to
destrop weeds and keep the crust brok
en. Six weeks after planting use a
side application underneath the drill
row. The fertilizer in this instance
had best be scattered broadcast ahead
of the cultivator and worked into the
soil. Two weeks . before the corn
bunches to tassel apply 100 pounds of
nitrate of soda.as a top dressing.
With anything like a favorable sea
son and careful and persistent cultiva
tion and the use of good seed, you
should be able to make 100 bushels of
corn by following these directions. Of
course, there is no guarantee that you
will do this, but' we have made as
much corn as this on land of similar
character by the plan outlined above.
* * *
PLANTING CORN AND SORGHUM
FOR SILAGE.
Hi M., Summerville, Ga., writes: 'When
planting corn and sorghum for .silage
would you plant in the same ^ow? If
not, how long after corn should sorghum
be planted? How mature should sorg-'
hum be when cut for silage?
On the college farm we plant corn
and sorghum in separate rows, ordi-
najrily two rows of corn are planted and
then two rows of sorghum. It has been
our practice to plant the sorghum be
fore the corn. Of course, early plant
ing for this ’crop is desirable. If* not,
relatively late planting 'should be pur
sued, for "the reason that in our expe
rience the early crop matures suffi
ciently to not be affected seriously by
a dry spell which often comes in the
spring, and the late crop is generally
benefited by the rains of the early sum
mer. Our silage corn is not planted as
a rule until some thirty days after the
field crop. We put the sorghiim in the
ground as soon as it warms up suffi-
Saving and Investing
The lload to Financial Success.
BY JOHN S. OSKISON.
N. W. Harris retired from the banking
business the other day after spending
fifty years in building up one of the
biggest and soundest investment bank
ing houses in the country.-- His suc
cess was possible only because he help
ed to develop the saving and investing
instinct of the people.
On the day he retired, a reporter got
from Mr. Harris a number of simple
maxims which are the outgrowth of h|is
fifty years of experience:
“A young man must learn to save
money as well as to make it.
“There is an old proverb, ‘Any fool
can make /money; it takes a wise man
to save it.*
“One way to save money is to lay out
a line of policy that is safe, and then
stick to it through thick and thin.
“Another way ,to save mQney—if a
young man c&n’t do it himself—is to
marry and let one’s wife handle the
pay envelope.
“It is as important for a young man
to learn to save money as. it is for him
to learn books.
‘.‘Money is not everything—real suc
cess means more than money—but one
must have money to gain success.”
I have noticed that the longer men
work in the financial field the simpler
become their ideas; they cast off the
wrappings of financial forms—the in
finite details of security issues, the be
wildering vocabulary* of the experts—
and talk in plain, homely language. B“L
fere the Pujo committee of congress
the clearest and the most understanda
ble testimony was that given by those
powerful veterans in the business. Mor
gan, Baker, and Schiff. They made it
clear that their trade was to handle
credit, and they spoke as men who saw
their function through no veil of tech
nique.
To Mr. Harris and men of similar ex-
perierfte national prosperity means
thrift on the part of everybody—not
merely the few with big wages and in
herited property. And saving is the
basis of all thrift.
Any man can find out how to get
a made-to-measure tailored suit of lat
est style free by writing to Reliable
Tailoring Co., 356 S. Peoria St., Chi
cago.—(Advt.)
STATE BANKERS WILL
STRESS AGRICULTURE
ATHENS, Feb. 24.—How to promote
agriculture in Georgia will be stressed
at the annual meeting of the Georgia
Bankers’ association, which is to be
held at Macon May 16-17. President
Andrew M. Soule, of the Georgia State
College of Agriculture, has been invited
by President Hunt and Secretary Mc-
Fadden to strike the keynote of the
discussion. This Dr. Soule has consent
ed to do and will address the bankers
9n "How Bankers Can Help in the Pro
motion of Agriculture in Georgia.” In
this connection it is of interest, to re
call that Dr. Soule accepted an invita
tion to discuss agriculture before 1 the
American Bankers' association at 3£>e-
troit last year.
The welfare of the banking interests
in Georgia being almost identical with
the agricultural welfare of the state,
and the exigencies arising on account
of the boll weevil now threatening both,
afford a timely opportunity for outlin
ing a definite program by which the
bankers can enter into the work of ad
vancing progressive agriculture. The
diversification of crops with intelligent
rotation and the advancement of the
interests of animal industry, it is
stated, will be among the subjocts dis
cussed as offering the only practical
means of meeting the weevil and for
promoting general agricultural prosper
ity in the state.
HOUSE KILLS PHAM
FOR TWO EATTLESHIPS
Economists Win Day and Vote.
Only One New Dread-
’ naught
toy Associated Mess.)
Yv ASHINGTON, Feb. 26.—The two
battleship program favorably reported
by the house naval committee was de
feated today in the nouse sitting as a,
committee of the whole. An amend
ment to appropriate for one battleship
only went through, 144 to 133. A ma
jority of the Democrats Voted for the
amendment, ^vhile the Republicans were
almost solidly against it.
Wm s Weary
and 1cm Qui
If You Feel Fagged to a Fill,
ish and Utterly Used Up
Here is Quick Relief.
ciently to insure germination and dan
ger of severe frosts are past. We plant
two rows of sorghum, using'' a special
plate in the two-horse corn planter.
The corn is planted with the same ma
chine two weeks to thirty days later.
Of course, you understand the sorghum
will grow for a longer period and re
main green much later in the season
than corn.i and especially is this true
if the weather should prove dry in the
early summer.
The great advantage of planting corn
and sorghum together is found in the
fact that the sorghum retains its juices,
and even though the corn be somewhat
dry and overripe, the two when run
into the silo together form an ideal
combination and keep excellently^ mucli
better than either one alone. We do
not cut the sorghum for silage until
it is headed out and the seeds are near
ly ripe. If put in the silo too soon a
sour product is obtained.
* * *
A FERTILIZING'FORMULA FOR
COTTON. N
A. J. B., Meigs, Ga., writes: What do
yqu tfiink of the following for cotton:
r l,000 pounds of 16 per cent acid, 300
pounds muriate of potash, 200 pounds
nitrate of soda and 500 pounds of cot
ton seed meal. I want to use 500
pounds per acre
FREE BOOK ON
m I 1
How you can grow it on your land
How to get “catch” firet planting
How to select and prepare the soil
How to get more than average crops
These and hundreds of other questions that you
want answered are clearly and distinctly covered
Ifi our new book iust issued entitled “Alfalfa-
Wonder Crop’*. This remarkable book contains
a priceless fund of information about alfalfa
growing, secured from many sources; United
State€ Government. State Experiment Stations,
the best posted authorities and successful grow-^
ers. In simple hnguage, easy to understand, it
tells just the things that you want to know before
you start to raise this greatest of all $cash money!
crops. This book will convince you that you
have some land on your farm where you can
profitably grow alfalfa. This information was
secuied at a great cost of time, money and re
search. It tells how to grovif alfalfa, how to get
results from first planting, how to select the field
and prepare the soil. It tells all about fertiliza
tion, plowing, liming, preparing the seed, when
to plant and how to plant. Tells what to do dur
ing the growing period, how to get bigger than
average crops, and how to cut and cure. The
contents of this hook are worth many dollars to
the fanner interested in growing alfalfa. This
book is ordinarily sold for 25 cents but we will
gladly send it without cost or obligation of any
kind if you answer at once. Don’t put it off-
write for free book today.
jALtOWAY BROS.-BOWftUH CO,, IPX 724 P WATEILOO, II,
™»Handsome Suft
Don’t Be Chained to the Hitching
Post of Wearyianii.
Half the people you meet complain of
weary muscles, stagnant brain, jangled
.icrves, and a mournful deslfe to lay
uown and jujt quit. Most of those pen pi.
nave been using nervines that spasm ad-
.cally flare up the nerves only to al.
aown again, as die they must Avoid
«-rve stimulants. Bear in mind that tbi3
worn out feeling is due to poor blood,
to bacteria in the water you dj*lnk; t6
the multiplying of destructive germs in
the blood faster than they can he over
come by the white corpuscles; and to
what is known as auto-toxemia, that con
dition wh#re the venou3/or Impure blood
accumulates faster than it can be re
placed by the red arterial blood,
If you feel played out go to arty drug
store and ask for a bottle of S. S. S.,
Swift’s Sure Specific, Here Is p. remedy
that gets at work in a twinkling; it Just
naturally rushes v rlght into your blood,
scatters germs right and left, up and
'Sown and sideways. •
You feel bejtter at once, not from a
stimulant, not from the action <of drugs,
but from the rational effect of a natural
medicine just as active pnd just as time
ly as to a man who has bedn lost in the
mountains, is about starved and,comes
across a settler just cooking a Bavory
meal of good honest beef. Ho nbt neglect
to get a bottle of S.’S. S. to day. It will
make yon feel better in just a few min
utes. It is prepared only in the labora
tory of The Swift Sperffflc Co., 12“ Swift
Bldg., Atlanta. Ga. Send "for their free
book telling of the many strange condi
tions that afflict the human family by
reason of impoverished blood.
The formula which you propose us
ing would contain per ton approximate- |
ly 17- pounds of available acid phos
phate, 160 pounds of available potash
and 63 pounds of available nitrogen.
This would give you a formula analyz
ing approximately 8.6 per cent of phos- j
phorus, 3.1 pfer cent of nitrogen’and -6 !
per cent of potash. We think this for- !
mula would be very good With the ex- 1
ception that it contains too much pot
ash. This can be easily remedies by
adding to the siipply of phosphoric
acid and reducing the amount of potash
used. We think for cdtton on average
land that 4 per cent of potash would
be all that is needed. If your cotton
rusts badly your formula would he
well proportioned. Suppose you reduce,
the muriate of potash by 150 pounds
and replace it with acid phosphate. We
think your formula would then be in a
more satisfactory form.
. * ' .
HOW TO USE WOOD ASHES.
F. L., Hiawasee, Ga., writes: I have |
about twenty bushels of wood ashes. <
They are real strong in potash. How i
could I use them to best advantage! j
Would it be best to uSe them drilled
in corn rows or broadcast them over
Wheat that is now growing nicely. 1
havq a mellow stubble land that was
in wheat last season, peas being sown
after wheat and not cut.
FREE
to Our*
. Agents
Write Today. Be tbe one in your
town to get this at-toundiin* tailoring
offer. An offer to giv* you the swellest
suit you ever eaw FJILE! But you must
hurry. We want a representative in
your town right away. IFe will start
you in a big moneii-mukino bust-
ness of your own—FREE! Plenty of
money and plenty of nifty clothes—for
YOU—if you write AT ONCE l No
moniy nor experience necessary
WE PAY ALL EXPRESS CHARGES
Yes, we pay everything. You take no
risk. Just take orders for our fihe clothes
—made of the most beautiful fabrics
and in the latest classiest styles. Keep
your present position and make
850.00 TO $100.00 A WEEK
on the side; or go into the business
life right and make $3,000 to 15,000 a year.
PARAGON clothes sell liko wildfire.
Agents swamped with orders on NEW
plan. Nothing like it anywhere.
Write Today
Get our .WONDERFUL
[ ■ right out to tsk. orders. Get our WONDERFUL
NEW OFFER right now. WE PAY ALL CI!AR«KS. Sehd a post <wrd
NOW—while this great offer is still open. Dsn’t delay—WRITE TODAY.
Paragon Tailoring Co., Dept** 05 , Chicago, III.
Unleached wood ashes contain from
4 to 8 per cent of potash, 1 to 2 per cent
of phosphoric acid, and 30 to 35 per
cent of lime. The potash is contained'
in the form of carbonate and is readily
available to plants. If one could
secure an abundance of wood ashes from
hard woods, the potash problem would
be solved on many of our farms. There
is such a limited amount of this ma*-
terial available, however, that it has no
appreciable effect on the supply of pot
ash. Of course, the ashes should be
saved and used as you are proposing
to do. Personally, we would be dis
posed to apply these separately instead
of mixing them with any other form
of fertilizer material. You will’fin^i
it all right'to use ashes under the drill
row for corn at the rate of 100 to 200
pounds per acre. They may be scat
tered over the soil broadcast and
worked in with a harrow, or placed in-
the bottom of the furrow and mixed
with the subsoil by tpeans of a bull
tongue. They should be applied a few
’days before the seed is put in the
ground and it is important that they
be well mixed with the soil. Of course,
they may be broadcasted over wheat,
but we hardly think they would be of
any material benefit to wheat at this
season of the year, and we would prefer
to reserve and use them pn some of the
cereals planted this spring.
RUPTURED
A Simple Home Method that
Anyone Can Use Without
Operation, Pain, Danger
or Loss of T!m«.
DON’T SEND ANY MONEY
You don’t want to co through life continually harassed
and chafed by trusses. You want to be freed from the evet
present danger of straneulation. What you want is a cure
that will end all danger, embarrassment and expense from
rupture for the rest of your life and this is the purpose oi
my remarkable free offer to ruptured people.
i have a new Method I want you to try at my expense
Fill out and mail the coupon below TO-DAY.
My free and generous offer includes a full brochure with
proof treatment and other essentials, together with valuable
information proving that rypturc is curable WITHOUT
OPERATION.
No matter whether you have single, doable or navel rup
ture or one following: an operation, you should mail tbe
coupon below with full address to-day. No matter bow old
you are or how hard you work, do not delay acceptine my
free offer. No matter whether you afe a min. Woman or
child, this is the one offer and opportunity you must not
neglect. No matter eventff you consider your case hopeless,
it is your duty to yourself and family to' find out how much
my free offer and Method can do for you.
I vy B
VvIili>^ 5M ' PPE:D @
YOU IN WOOD g
SOLD KENTUCKY RYES
L_ WHISKEY I
CDCC pnimnw 1 Mark location of
rntt uUUrUrl I Rapture on this
I Diagram
Where is Rupture?
Age —;
How long Ruptured?
Left
Leg
Cut this out, or copy and
mail to-day and the pack
age will be sent you at once.
W. S. Rico, 310-AB Main St., Adams, N. Y.
/
This is not strong, flrey, now whis
key but contains the best six year old
Kentucky Rye. It appears-on our
list at a higher price than we Quote
here, and we make this speclal.price
in order to get you started using It.
Try a package. It will please any one
who enjoys a mild, smooth whiskey.
1 FULL Gal. $2.00 4 FULL Qts $2.20
2 FULL J 3.60 8 FULL “• 8.90
3 FULL ’* 4.95 12 FULL “ 6.00
4 1*4 Gallons 7.26 16 FULL “ 8.20
EXPRESS CHARGES PAID
fo any office of Southern or Adams
Companies. Return this ad with order
and get free glass and cork screw.
H.L. SPRINKLE DIST. CO.
Jacksonville,- Fla. OR Girard, Ala.
Order Prom Nearest Point
P p £ £ W ATCH. RI N G |
AND CHAIN
«.<)
- and wa will send y__
watch, ring and hnndaoma chain 1
HOMER WATCH CO., Dept ^ CHIC.
$2 Bottle
FREEI
I I have been treating EpUepty, Fit*, <
"Sky-1 I Falling Sickness very successfully for on
.. T...41 twenty years, giving relief to many whs
had given up hope of ever overcoming tblM
disease. They write like this.- “I thank God I heard oi
your treatment.” “My aon Is strong and healthy.” ‘T
thank you a thousand times.” “May God bless ybu,” etol
I will be pleased to prepare and send free a lft-o*. bow
tie, (regular 12.00 size), also testimonials to anyon^
suffering with this disease. Who will glvp me a full
description of their case. Address /
F. E. GRANT, M. D., Dept 686, Kansas City.
\triat order NOW for
HAYNER BOTTLED-IN-BOND WHISKEY
T^HIS is the ideal whiskey for the home
A —rich, pure, delicious—guaranteed to
please in every way—or your money back.
[FULL$>
QUARTS!
20
IN
1 SEALED j
k CASE
[ express!
J CHARUS/
PAID,
Insist On Bottled-in-Bond
Be particular in your selection—avoid
blends and compounds—and remember
there is only one way you can be SURE
of getting absolutely pure, straight whis
key and' that is to insist on BOTTLED-
IN-BOND.
That’s What We Offer You
Hayner fine, old Private Stock Bottled-jn-
Bond Whiskey—shipped in strong, sealed
case—direct from distillery to you—and
all it costs you is $3.20 for FOUR full
quarts—express paid by us.
There Is No Question
about a whiskey like this—you KNOW it
is good and pure—the U. S. Government’s
official Green Stamp over the cork is your
assurance that it is bottled-in-bond, fully
aged, full 100% proof and full measure.
Nowhere Else Can You Do So Well
Blends and compounds can be had any
where and at any price—but when it
comes to BOTTLED-IN-BOND—Hayner
Whiskey has no equal.
How Can We Do It?
We sell our entire product direct from
Distillery to Consumer—thus saving you
lS %'
Us Your Order—
guarantee—you will find it as fine a whis
key as you ever tasted and the best value
you ever bought—or you may send it
back at our expense and-we will return
your money without a word.
You Take No Chances
Our guarantee is fair and square—it
means what it says—we must send you a
quality that will strike you as rich, pure,
delicious—pleasing in every way—and we
will do it
No letter is necessary—
Cut Out and Use This Coupon
and address our nearest office
THE HAYNER DJSTILLING COMPANY |
Enclosed And 13.20 for which fiend me FOUR fnll E
quart bottles of Hayner Private Stock Bottled-in- a
Bond Whiskey—express paid—os pef your offer It |
is understood that if this whiskey is not found as |
represented and satistactorytomeineveryway.lt a
may be returned at your expense—and roy *3.20 13 to 1
be promptly refunded. M-26
Name ' §
Addrcsls j
No oiders filled for less than 4 quarts.
all the profit of the middleman and dealer Orders for Arizona. California. Colorado. Idaho, Montana,
and giving you this fine old whiskey at Nevada. New Mexico. Oregon. Utah. Washington or Wyo
j- x-ii » • ^ mlng must be on the basis of 4 Quarts for S4.00 by Express
the distiller S pjice. Prepaid or 20 Quarts for $15.20 by Freight Prepaid. 13-N
HAYNER
* PRIVATE StdoA
WHISKEY
BOTTLED Si SOW
•HE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY
Mtiiury NO.3 {U DISTRICT.TRO* 0Hl0 '
’ r u«r.5,Mo. orraswsw??iWC3W*
St p.*;! 5 ** C!TY * K0.
DAYTON, OHIO. Kl',7
ADDRESS OUR
NEAREST OFFICE
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO.. Dept. M-26
Dsyton. 0. Boston, Hass. St. Louis, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. St. Paul. 1
Distillery ot Troy. Ohio ESTABLISHED 1808
New Orleans, La. Jacksonville, Vto.
Capital (500,000.00 Full Paid