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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1013.
w
Warrantad to Give Satisfaction,
GombauWs
Caustic Balsam
Has Imitators But No Competitors.
A Safe, Speedy and Positive Cure for
Curb, Splint. 8*reeny, Capped Book,
Strained Tendons, Founder, Wind
Puff*, and all lameness from Spavin,
Ringbone and other bony tumors.
Cures all akin diseases or Parasites,
Thrush, Diphtheria. Removes all
Sunehes from Horses or Cattle,
As a Human Remedy for Rheumatism,
Sprains, Sort Throat, etc., it is iuvaluable.
Every boitlo of Caustio Balsam sold is
Warranted to give satisfaction. Price $1,60
per bottle. Sola by druggists. or sent by ex
press, charges paid, with full directions for
Its use. IFSflnd for descriptive circulars,
testimonials, etc. Address
Tha Lawrenct-Willlams Co., Cleveland, 0
AGRICULTURAL
fy irnur,\Tin\!
y-o Education
r* 1 ""**- =^-30^ —~ successful Farming-
This department ■will cheerfully endeavor io furnish any Information,
Letters; should be addressed to Dr. Andrew M. Soule, president "Mate
Agricultural College. Athens. Go.
FARM LEADERSHIP IN GEORGIA
Low Fares!
Homeseekers tickets are
sold at greatly reduced fares,
on the I stand 3rdTuesdays
of each month; stopovers
free and 25 days time, via
Cotton Belt Route,—to
Arkansas
and Texas
Winter tourist tickets (round
trip) from southeast points to
many points in Texas, Louisiana
and New Mexico, will be on sale
daily Nov. 1st. 1913 to April 30,
1914; with exceedingly long return
limit of June 1st, 1914. Stopovers.
All year tourist tickets on sale
daily to certain points in Texas
—90 day limit.
The Cotton Belt Route is the
direct line fromMemphis toTexas,
through Arkansas—two splendid
trains daily, with electric lighted
equipment of through sleepers,
parlorcars and dining cars. Trains
from all parts of Southeast make
direct connection at Memphis
with Cotton Belt Route trains
to the Southwest.
For (nil information about Horaa-
aeekers Fares, Winter Tourist Fares
or All Year Tourist Tickets, address j
the undersigned. Eooks about farm- *
ing in Southwest, sent fres. Wrltel 1
L. P. SMITH, Traveling P**«’r Agent, »
Browa-Marx Bldg. Birmingham, Ala.
AMERICAN
FENCl
GENUINE
More Big Fence News!
More Farm Profits!
Better and better! Best news is,
heavier galvanizing. Positively does not
chip nor crack. More years of fence life.
No extra cost to you. More farm profits.
More good news is, perfectly uniform
fabric. Improved automatic machinery,
the reason- No extra cost to you. L&rger
business enables us to keep down prices.
Your choice of Bessemer or Open
Hearth Steel. You get equally big value
in either case. Get catalog.
Dealers everywhere. See them.
FRANK B4ACKES. V?e«-/V«f, and Gen. Safes Agent
American Steel & Wire Company
Chicago, lfew York, Cleveland, yittnharrb. Denver*
If. S, Steel Products I n., Nan PrtuelaM
HASTING’S
100 Bushel Oats
Absolutely Purs,C lean,Sound
And as fine as can be grown, free
from all noxious grass or weed seeds
and the most prolific oats known.
$1.60 bushel, 10-bu»hel lots 90 cents
bushel. .Special price larger lots.
Extra fancy Berkshires, out of fine
bred sows and sired by two of the
best boars In the state, bred and open
gilts boars ready for service, and
young pigs all ages. Prices right;
quality the best.
FAIR VIEW FARM
PALME 10, GA.
Semis,
REMEDIES
JM.
Farmer or Farmers
with rig in every County to intro- t&OJVs
dace and *e'i Family and Veteri-
I nnry Remedies, Fx tract* and Spice*. Fine pay.
One mas made $90 one week. We mean buri«
res* and want a man in your County. Write u*.
RRwm - Mm11« (U. ,P(»t38. CUu aw.,1.,.
The struggle for leadership in in
creasing. Genius is the gift of the
«oda. and only once in a generation does
the lightinng cf success center in an
'ndividual, An army without leaders is
helpless; an industry without a skilled
and astute director i3 helpless, A
bank without a skilled financier to di
rect it will certainly fail. How can
the farmer hope to succeed without
.eadership? The history of the world
shows this is impossible, and because of
our confident feeling in our individual
prowess as a nation, we witness 'today
in America a certain degree of decad
ence along agricultural lines. It is not
so easy to produce large and bountiful
crops as in the past, and our soils do
not respond so readily to the plow and
the use of fertilizers. The rich gifts
of nature have been exploited or wasted
tnd man is now dependent on his own
ndividual effort to win a livelihood
’icm the soil. Should he bring to his
aid, therefore, all the helps which the
state and the nation provide, or is it
ieal for him to ignore these?
There is no such thing as standing
stilt in the world. Nations like indi
viduals move forward or backward.
Growth is a constant and uniform
thing. Atrophy is a malignant disease.
As a nation of farmers, we must there
fore move forward uniformly or fall
steadily behind. In Georgia the farm
er has to contend with smut in oats, a
disease which lias proven very destruc
tive t° this crop, yet for ati outlay of
; a few cents he may treat his oats with
^crmalin and prevent an enormous
waste. This gift of practical knowl-
j edge is brought to the aid of the farm
er by the work of the scientists con-
j nected with our colleges of agriculture
and experiment stations. All truth’ in
its last analysis is simplified so that
it can be applied to the advancement
of human art and industry. When the
farmer meets with ari obstacle to pro
gress in the cultivation of a crop, the
management of his soil, the feeding and
care of his livestock, the protection of
his orchards from insects and fungous
diseases, he may be sure that some
where nature offers an antedote for his
troubles. How shall he discover it?
Can he take his time as an individual
.and give years of effort and concen
trated attention to the study of this
subject? Only in the rarest cases is
this possible. The state and the na-
j tlon must provide the savant to learn
I the history of these troubles and pro
vide the remedies by which they may
I be overcome.
It would seem, therefore, that the
: wise farmer would take advantage of
every effort which the workers in the
colleges and stations may bring to his
attention; that he would read the best
books and papers; that he would go to
institutions such as the state provides
whenever possible and learn through
the special courses of instruction offer
ed how to meet the .difficulties which
confront him as a farmer. In order
j that these ends may be accomplished at
i a minimum of cost and in the simplest
i and most practical manner possible, the
i State C6Uege of Agriculture has pro-
I vided short courses for the farmers o?
| Geogia commencing on January 5 and
i last for ten days. They come at a sea-
i son of the year when the farmer is not
j busy; when he can best afford to be
I away from heme for a short time. They
i afford him an opportunity to refresh
! his mind by coming in contact with
leaders of thought along agricultural
lines and by learning from the expe
riences , of his friends and neighbors
who may be attending these courses.
They provide special instruction along
the varied lines involved in a knowledge
of cotton industries, cereal production,
livestock production and horticulture.
In order that the visioh and purpose
of the boys and girls may be increased,
special courses have been provided for
those who have shown themselves
worthy of advanced training by reason
"f the standing attained in the corn and
canning clubs contests held in the sev
eral counties of the state. No subject of
practical value tp Georgia farmers is
overlooked In these courses, yet all the
discussions are presented in the most
simplified form bv skilled teachers who
have traveled widely in the state and
acquainted themselves with the condi
tions which the farmer* have to meet
and overcome.
Would it not be worth while for the
fanner to learn how to decrease the
huvin* cost and increase the selling price
"f farm produce? And this is possible,
farmers who have taken the short
courses nt Athens have demonstrated the
truth of this statement. The farmer
who wants to raise more grain can learn
how to do so. If he desires to nave
the money he now spends for hav which
he can produce at home to better ad
vantage. why pot. learn what the col-
’eye is doing in its demonstration field
with regard to the production of various
*' f *w and interesting forage crops adapt
ed to Georgia conditions? The man who
wants to know how to rai«e live stock
^ust find out how to free his land from
h*ks. feed Mf cattle more intelligently.
sell to better advantage. On everv
-'rm in Georgia some beef cattle should
» maintained. There is waste land
'ailable for this purpose. The college
sold two-year-old steers for $80
niece which were raised on waste land
”ch ox nearlv every farmer has. Why
°fc take up this new line of industry
hich means so much to the state? To
o so one must first learn how. and that
? Why short courses in live stock pro-
’ction are offered by the college each
inter.
The man who wonts to engage in
-1111 growing or trucking will find here
’eflnite information on how to select
’a seed, plant his crop, fertilize it, and
'T*otect it from insect pests. He can
ave enough on one season’s crop to
"ore than pav for his course. Georgia
■'irrnerg ’spend $25,000,000 a year for
fertilizers. Are these commercial plant
foods adapted to the soil* on which thev
*'*re used? Are they applied in the right
proportions to crons? Are thev used so
“s to combat rust successfully,, or to
supply the unusual deficiency which
■’’ay exist in certain soils with regard to
Phosphorus. potash and nitrogen, or are
thev applied in a somewhat haphazard
fashion? Farmers -who expect to spend
several hundred dollars a year for fertil-
*zers should atndv their soils and know
♦heir type, the defects which are likely
to characterize them, and how to over
come these through properly balancing
n.p thji food supply of the soil. The
courses at the college are designed to
-vrovide this information at a minimum
of rorst. It has been shown, for in
stance, that several varieties of oats
grown side by side may show a variation
In yield of sixteen to thirteen bushels,
an acre. Which kind are you growing,
Mr. Farmer, or have you ever thought
about the importance of seed selection?
Why not come up to the tallege this
winter and learn something about mat
ters of this kind?
Remember that these courses arc* de
signed especially for farmers and farm
ers’ boys who are sixteen years of
ago and over. There are 133 lectures
and forty demonstrations given during
the course in question. No examinations
for entrance are required and no tuition
fees are charged save a registration
fee of $1. The lectueis offered in the
short course are presented in summar
ized form so the person attending may
carry the data home for future refer
ence. The college of agriculture is a
state institution supported out of the
public treasury. It is your Institution,
Mr. Farmer, and it is endeavoring to
serve you in every possible way. It is
providing practical courses or instruc
tion of the greatest value to you as an
individual farmer. Why not come and
take advantage of the golden opportu
nities it offers you for advancement?
It can aid you in the solution of many
of your most - vexing problems. It will
be the means of enlarging your vision
It will bring you in touch with the agri
cultural leaders of. the state. It will
teach you where to find information of
vital concern. It will help you to un
derstand the fundamental relation of
science to successful farm practice and
the cost in view of the advantages you
will gain will be practically nothing.
You can not afford to miss the chance
which the state offers you through the
agency of tho State College of Agri
culture to acquire new knowledge, and
hence a consequent new power for ad
vancement and development in your
chosen vocation. Emerson, the greatest
American essayist, has said: “The first
farmer was the first man, and all nobil
ity rests on the possession and use
of land,” No doubt if he had lived
until the present generation, he would
change the sentiment thus expressed by
the insertion ol‘ the word “intelligent”
use of land. Successful farming is no
longer a matter of brawn and muscle,
but rather Mepondc on the ability to
understand and appreciate the funda*
mental truths of nature so long hidden
from the world,, but Which science has
revealed in so simple .and clear-cut n
form that, their correct interpretation
is row comparatively simple. The wist
farmer like the good business man will
therefore fortify himself with all the
special knowledge which he can obtain
and in so doing will reap the measure
of success which a kindly Providence in
tended him to enjoy.
* * «
TEXAS, OR TICK, FEVER.
T. F. Y., Soarboro,, Oft., writes: I have
recently lost four fine oxen said by the
people here to be caused by bloody murrain.
I have een working them for several vveekn
feeding meal end hulls exclusively. They
were brought from Jefferson* tfxmnty six
weeks ago. They Tmv«T fever and live from
six ,Un nznt-fy hours after taken. I would
like to know what you think is the trouble
and what you would suggest us a remedy.
Your oxeji are evidently suffering
from what is known us tick, or Texas,
fever. This i» produced by the Infesta
tion of the animal with a specific spe
cies of tick known as margaropus annu-
latus. The symptoms given in you •
letter are characteristic of the deaths
caused by Texas fever due to the in
festation of the animals with ticks;.
The only chance you have of protecting
your animals from further loss is to
geo that they are kept fren from this
pest. It would appear that the an
imals when bought by you were in
tick-free or uninfested territory, ana
when carried to your section of the
state they became more or less heavily
infested with ticks, with the result
that they have succumbed ‘to Texas, oi
tick, fever.
We would advise that you place your
animals in a dry. bare lot, ? where yon
know cattle have not been kept for
some months, and feed them there. Sec
that* they are curried thoroughly ever}
morning and that all ticks are removed.
It is very Important that you examine
all parts of the body, and especially
those parts not readily vlsnue to tho
eye, for it is in just such places that
the ticks are likely to secrete them
selves, and it will take but a slight in-
Faron leases should encourage the
long time occupancy of farms and the
feeding of more livestock. A bettor sys
tem of tenant farming brought about j
by longer leases and the encourage
ment to feed livestock, instead of grow
ing grain crops for market would be
a mighty factor in rural improvement, j
Prof. Bailey says that a weed is noth- !
ing more or less than a plant that Ip
not wanted. Com is a weed in a pota
to field and rye la a weed in the buck
wheat field. Dandelions are common
ly called weeds and yet in many gardens
they are grown for greens and are
crops, not weeds.
Cattie should not be allowed to drink •
from old ponds which happen to con- j
tain enough water. You cannot get
good milk or butter from dirty pond|
water.
If your hogs have had plenty of clo
ver they$ will not iffeed much corn to
make them simply fine. They can just
about get their living on clover and
a good living, too.
A common mistake is to attempt to
make beef from dairy bred steers.
.Select the largest, most perfectly bpiit
sows for breeding purposes. These are
usually the ones we sell just because
they will bring a dollar or two more.
A rusty milk can is an ideal nesting
place for bacteria. Scalding water will
not reach all of the little places where
they hide and multiply.
10-CENT “CASCARETS”
IS TOUR LAXATIVE
Best liver and bowel cleanser
and stomach regulator
known
Get a 10-cent box.
Rut aside—just onc^-—-the Salts, Pills,
Castor Oil or Purgative Waters which
merely force a passageway through
the bowels, but do not thoroughly
cleanse, freshen and purify these
drain? go organs, and have no effect
whatever upon the liver and stomach.
Keep your “insides” pure and fresh
with Cas carets, which thoroughly
cleanse the stomach, remove tho undi
gested, sour food and foul gases, take
the excess bile from the liver and
carry out. of the system all the con
stipated waste matter and poisons in
the bowels.
A Casoaret to-night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while ybu sleep—never gripe, sicken,
and cost only 10 cents a box from
your druggist*. Millions of men and
women take a Cascaret now and then
and never have Headache, Biliousness.
Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour
Stomach or Constipated Bowels. Cas-
carets belong in every household
Children just love to take them.
(Advt.)
Cotton Seed!
We are now ready to ship the fin
est lot of cotton seed in the South,
grown on our own Farms, ginned on
our private gin, are sound, pure
and as good as can be grown.
Cleveland’s big boll the best in the
world $1.00 bushel. Cook’s improv
ed extra select $1.25 bushel. 10c
bushel off in lots of 25 bushels or
more.
FAIR VIEW FARM
Palmetto, 0a.
festation to produce tick rever and
consequent death of the animals. As
the ticks are removed «*.ey should
either be thrown into a cun of kero
sene or burned. To simply scrape
them off and let them drop down in the
lot, where they can reinfeat the an
imals would not be worth while. A good
many people doubt the existence or
■tick fever, because there are various
ticks which sometimes get on cattle,
and this is confusing to the layman,
but your experience proves to you that
.it does exist, and if you are to protect
your animals from destruction, you
must see that the ticks are kept off
of them.
Where a man has only a few animals
to handle, hand dressing such as we
have suggested is advtsaoic. We would
also recommend that you use on your
oxen, applying by means of a nrush or
sponge, such substances as crude pe
troleum or cotton seed oil and kero
sene in equal parts. These are quite
effective tlckicides and not costly or
difficult to apply, provided you have
a competent foreman or else superin
tend the work yourself. If left to in
different or careless laborers, they are
liable to let some ticks escape, and in
apite of your supposed precautions your
animals will succdmb to this disease.
Where one has a large number of an
imals to handle, spraying or dipping is
advisable.
Wo would suggest that you vary the
ration fed your cattle and use some
gfeen feed whenever practicable. It
would be well to substitute corn men
or corn and cob meal in place of the
exclusive ration of cotton seed meat.
Very heavy feeding of cotton seed meai
to work animals is not advisable, in
that you may surfeit the system with
nitrogen. The combination ration of
hulls, cotton seed meal, corn meal and
green feed will be found ideal.
* 3 #
treatment of string halt.
L. C\, Trento:*, On., writes: I have a
filly one year old that lias the utrlnghftlt.
Any help that you van give tne will be
appreciated.
In the majority of cases medicinal
treatment is of no benefit in treating
a well-pronounced case of stringhalt.
This trouble generally becomes more
aggravated as the animal becomes old
er. One of the {jest things you can
do in a case of this character is to sup
ply the animal with an abundance of
easily digested food. Give as much va
riety as possible. A mixture of oata,
cotton seed meal and bran will bo
found helpful. A tableepoonful of a
mixture of common salt, i ounces, sul
phur, 2 ounces, and hard wood ashds. 2
ounces given three times a day will
sometimes be found serviceable. Fow
ler’s - solution may be used at times
with advantage. Do not give over a
half ounce dose in the feed daily. Grad
ually increase by one-quarter ounce at
a time until one ounce is given at a
dose in the morning and the same at
night. This treatment should not be
continued for more than two weeks, then
withheld and repeated. In some in
stances cutting the lateral extensor be
low the hock joint gives permanent re
lief to horses. This is not a danger
ous operation, but should only be per
formed by n competent veterinarian.
f • *
CAKED UDDER.
J. W. YV\, Dadovtlle, Ala., writes*. I
have a f-.ne cow with a calf n’ne days old.
When she brought the calf before this one
her udder wan swollen very large and then
formed a cake in one «f her teats. J did
alj I knew bow to do but It did not go away.
I thought per ha ns it would t>« better after
tlris calf but It U not. She *ti]l given
some milk out of it but not much- Would
like to know if there is anything 1 can
do for my cow?
The trouble about, which you inquire
has now no doubt become of a chronic
character. The udder frequently cakes
and treatment should be commenced im
mediately and the inflammation reduced
by fomenting for twetnv minutes with
warm water. Tho uocer should then
be rubbed dry and after that some
ointment applied which will tend U
.soften it and reduce the fevered condi
tion. One Of the best liniments you
can use for this purpose may be pre
pared by mixing together two ounces
of ladanum, one ounce of tincture ot
aconite and five ounces of tincture of
ment. This lotion will not blister. We
do not think there iu much hope of
restoring the udder to its normal con
dition as the trouble is of such long
standing, but careful, thorough and per
sistent milking and the treatment sug
gested will be as likely to be of serv
ice as any suggestions we can offer
at the present time.
VC*
CONTROLLING SMUT IN OATS.
G. W. H., MiUedgerUle. Ga., writi-a: I
would like to know the bent method of de-
stroy’ng smut In oats. My last crop con
tained considerable smut and I thought it
would be best to treat the seed before
planting again.
“In The Piping Times Oi Peace"
“I’ve smoked it nigh on to 53 years, and 1 feel as young, hale and
hearty as I did the day I first smoked it! ” The grand old army of
“Bull” Durham smokers is greater than all the armies oi the world Put together /
“Bull” Durham is the lifelong friend of millions of smokers all over the
world, because this grand old tobacco affords lasting enjoyment and satisiaction.'
GENUINE
Bull Durham
SMOKING TOBACCO
(Forty “rollings” in each 5-cent muslin sack)
“Bull” Durham has been handed down from father to son for three genera
tions, and is smoked today by more millions oi men', in pipe and cigarette, than
all other high-grade tobaccos combined !
And “Bull” Durham is the same today as it was 53 years ago—just pure,
good, honest tobacco—rich, fragrant and satisfying. Packed in the same homely
muslin sack—because the quality is all in the tobacco—where it belongs!
“Bull” Durham smokers don’t want
painted tins or “premiums”. They don’t want
to pay for something they cannot smoke! They
know that “Bull” Durham Tobacco is a
premium in itself. Get a 5-cent muslin sack
at the nearest dealer’s today—roll a cigarette
or try a pipeful—and enlist in the “Bull”
Durham army for life I
A book oi ‘ ’’papers''
FREE with each
..5-cent muslin sack.
AGRICULTURAL CONDITIONS
AROUND THE PANAMA CANAL
Smut in oats may be successfully pre
vented either by what is known as the
hot weather treatment or the formalin
treatment. Where formalin i* used the
«ee<i may be sprinkled or immersed for
thirty minutes in a solution of one pint
of formalin, that is, a 40 per cent solu
tion of formaldehyde, to fifty gallons of
water. When this treatment is followed.
It is important that the seed first be
stirred thoroughly into a tub of cold wa
ter and the smut balls rising t,o the sur
face skimmed off. Then treat with for
malin and spread out to dry. A little
flaked lime may be used to hasten this
nrocess but this is not essential.
If you find it preferable you may treat,
vour oats for smut with hot water. This
is accomplished by placing the seed in
i bag or basket which will readily admit
water. Then immerse it completely for
f en minutes in water at a temperature of
133 degrees F. It is important that the
temperature of the water be .exactly
right. After treatment cool quickly by
Immersing in cold water and spread out
to dry.
(BY H. H. ben$:ttt.)
The climate of the canal zone is humid
and typically tropical. With a very nar
row annual range in temperature, but
with marked contrasts in quantity or
rainfall, the seasons are aptly divided
into dr y and rainy. The dry season prop
er begins usually about tho midle of De
cember, al:hough there are occasionally
considerable variations from this. Fairly
heavy precipitation sometimes occurs 1 In
the dry season, particularly on the At
lantic slope.
Normally the season is characterized
by cloudless skies, constant winds, and
such scanty rainfall that many crops
which make steady growth throughout
the rainy months hasten to maturity,
practically cease to grow, .or are com
pletely parched unless irrigated. The
prevailing type of corn planted about
December 1, usually matures the latter
part of February. Nortnern vegetables
are unable to survive the dry season, but
certain tropical species and many tropical
fruits are uninjured or only slightly re
tarded in growth.
Many' trees shed their leaves at this
time of the year, which corresponds to
winter or. the dormant season of plants
in temperate zones.
The growth of vegetation during the
rainy season Is phenomenal. An aban
doned or untended clearing is quickly
covered with a dense tangle of rapidly
growing plants, while unseasoned fence
posts cut from soft wood -trees, driven
into the ground, take root and soon pro
duce trees. Many northern flowers ane
vegetables are forced by the warm, hu
mid climate into wood and leaf growth at
the expense of blossoms and fruit. Cow-
peas and cucumbers fruit fairly well
throughout the rainy season, as do also
a number of other vegetables.
Most of the indigenous plants make
the scant supply of moisture attendant
on the rapid drying out of soils in the
dry season. Owing to the great sur
face inequality of the country and the
imperviousness of the clayey soils,
run-off is extremely rapid. With a few
days of sunshine exposed soils dry out
i sufficiently to cause excessive baking
1 and cracking. When land is to be
broken by plowing, advantage should
| be taken of the first favorable weather
| during the latter part of the wet season,
due care being taken in all cases that
the soil is in proper condition with
respect to moisture, that is, not soggy
, or sticky.
1 Among the important temperate
zone vegetables that have been more
or less successfully grown are cucum
bers, eggplants, lettuce, beans, cow-
peas, radishes, carrots, peppers an«i
pumpkins. in fact there is little
reason to doubt that with knowledge
gained through systematic experi
mentation a sufficient supply of vege
tables will be produced to replace, in a
large measure, the canned and cold-
storage products at present consume'
by the white inhabitants. It is tru*
that many obstacles will be on-
countered in the establishment of a
agriculture upon a modern busine«.‘
like basis, and much remains to be de
termined through exoerl mentation, es
pecially as to manurial treatment an
as to the best varieties of native am’
foreign plants.
16 HOSIERY
GIVEN AWAY
I us your name
* Mist;) and post
PAIR
fcftKffcr. . .
office address, plainly written,
and we will forward you post
paid, by mall (Parcel Post) Six
teen handsome Gold Deco
rated Boxes of our world fam
ous Healing and Complexion
Cold Cream to dispose of among
frie ds at 25 cents a OOX.
When sold, remit US the four dol
lars collected and we will promptly
forward you as a reward for your
work, sixteen pair (32 Stock-
ln«.) food wearine, jncdl-
» m weight. Ladle*’,
eat e or Children’* Ha-
£lery,black or tan fast colors,
any size or assortmrnf you may
select. This is a bia Hosiery offer for the whole
family and should be taken advantage of at once
Ladies, write us for the sixteen boxes Cream and
premium catalogue. We trust you. Address,
BIG MAIL ORDER HOUSE i
.HMlefrD.fi. •• BRIOQEWaTCn, CONN. .
Another Child Burned
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
GREENSBORO, Nov. 18.—Carlete
; the little sixteen-months-old daught*
of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Moore, was ten
; bly burned this morning about 1
! o'clock. She had slipped into a ?*co
where there was a fire in an open gra’
| and in some manner her clothing becor
(ignited.
CASTOR IA
Por Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
rhis Suit Made to tfioo
Order Express Paid V "
/Most Amazing OfferEvsr Mads\
This Is a suit made to your individual
measure of all wool. UithWM (|U8iraii-
tu«d for twa yurt. W« guarantee the
workmanship and material
throughout. This it the lowest
price a tailored-to-meaaure all
wool suit has ever been offered
by any reliable tailoring house.
We do it to prove the quality,
style and workmanship ox
Supreme Tailoring. Our big general
ine of fabrics and styles will suit
any purse.
BIG MONEY FOR AGENTS
We are one of the oldeat and best
I nown bouses in the United States.
Have a special opportunity to
tefr men to take oi
supply the capital,
nets you the business,
any ambi tious man. wo
time. No experience
1 instructions and help that will
make you succeed from the start
SUPREME TAILORING CO., Dept 12, CHICAGO
less. CIO dally for
I, working in spare
ence needed. Full
Bears the
Signature of
=3=
Co You Know That GEORGIALAXD
Is the safest investment YOU can makei
Has increased in value 154 per cent in the last ten years?
Has the most productive soil in the South J
Is INCREASING in value each day?
Will never be lower in price?
YOU should write TODAY.
Is now being sold in price and acreage to suit purchaser, by
Ceorgia Land and Securities Co.
Citizens 1 rust Bldg.,
Savannah, Georgia
oSOLO GUITAR^
ai\d)
.INSTRUCTION BOOKJP^S
arir-ffi:v r
Full sol** instrument, 2 feet u:nl
10 inches ler.g. 10 Indies
„iue, American manufacture, well and carefully
made, cherry finish, richly ornamented. All
strung with 0 strings, has clear, rich toue,
easy to hold, durable and satisfactory as $J,o.(>0
fiuitar. With Jt we give FREE a Self Inatruc-
t.on Book. Write for -4 packages HLUIKK to sell at 10 cents each.
When sold return the $2.40 and we will send Guitar and Instruc ion
Book. BLUINE MFG. CO., 486 Mill street, Concord Junct., Mass.
I Advt. l
M
Itfisi
i rr/'v i /-■ tfl
xT'SSsb
send us your name and address, plainly
written, and we will mail j’ou postpaid, cn credit. 16
boxes Thompson’s Toilet and Complexion Cold
Cream to d.bpose of an.oug friends at 25 cents a box.
When sold remit us the tour dollars, and we will
promptly send you for your trouble Eight (four pair)
Nottingham Lzre Curtains, nearly three yards
long. Ladies, wr.te us at once tor the 16 boxes Cr<
CMAS.
Lace Dept. 2
B.
THOMPSON
Bridgewater. Conn.