Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, November 21, 1913, Image 6

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. j A 6 THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1913. ^P>ricultural Never Rot, Rust or Burn Coet Lose Then Wood Shingles Steel Shingles are so far ahead of common rood shingles that there’s simply no compari son. They last four times longer than wood shingles—are ten limes easier to put on—and make a roof that will NEVER rot, rust, leak or catch fire. An Edwards Roof gives wonderful Protection to Life and Property Each Edwards Steel Shingle is galvanized all over. Edges are dipped in MOLTEN ZINC. No chanoe for rust to get in its work. Our patent In terlocking Device makes all joints witter tight and takes care of expansion and contraction. Steel shingles come in sheets of 100 or more—as easy to lay os a carpet—on sheathing or over old shingles. Lowest Factory Prices All Freight Fully Prepaid We sell direct from factory. We pay the freight and give $10,000 guarantee against lightning loss. Join hands with over 100,000 owners of Edwards Roofs to save money, time and trouble. HilhSI—■ Send postal, at onoe. for world’s Mf K| I Bi f greatest Roof Book, No. 11363, and WW 111 I bl Special Factory Prices on Ed- " wards Steel Shingles. If possi ble, give dimensions of your roof, so we can quote prices on the complete job. 1 THE EDWARDS MANUFACTURING COMPANY 11353 Lock Street Cincinnati, Ohio Largest Makers of Sheet Metal Products in the World _ and SUCCESSFUL FARMING & w AndrewM. 3oule This department will cheerfully endeavor to furnish any information. Letters should he addressed to Dr. Andrew M. Soule, president State Ag ricultural College, Athens, Ga. A FUTURE FOR NORTHEAST GEORGIA FARM SETTLEMENT on 3400 acres'in5.W.Georqia selected nnd approved hyAgr. Dept. CENTRAL^GEORGIA RY The Central of Georgia Ry. has con tracted with the owner of the best available tract along its lines to sub- dmde and sell at reasonable prices on terms of one-third cash, balance in 3 years at 6 Most of the farms have half or more cleared land. Farms sold only to white farmers in Farms of 25 to 200 Acres) [At $15 to $35 Per Acre.] If you want a Southern farm home, this is your opportunity. Write today for descriptive pamphlet, and book Aia- , bama and Georgia, the Home-Seekers Opportunity That Was Overlooked. J. F. JACKSON, Agricultural Agt.. Central of Ga. Ry. I 277 V, Broad St. Savannah, Ga. HASTING’S 100 Bushel Pals Absolutely Pure,C lean,Sound And as fine as can be grown, free from all noxious grass or weed seeds and the most prolific oats known. 91.00 bushel, 10-bushel 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; qr&lity the best. FAIR VIEW FARM PALMETTO, GA. ROOFING m ■ p More than $325,000 Sjk Eg BSas worth of every g&E E9WS make and kind of brand new, dependable roofing now be ing offered at such remarkably low pnees, that we ask all in need or who contemplate buying to hesitate placing orders until they get these remarkable Bankrupt prices. This lot consists of every known make Of roofing—Galvanized, 23£c per sq. ft.; Corrugated Steel, lXc per sq. ft.; Rubber Surfaced Ajax Roofing 62c per square, etc. We now own the Chicago House Wrecking Company and incorporated for $10,000,000; this tremendous purchase is the first result —nothing like it ever before attempted by anyone. Every dollar’s worth of the roofing guaranteed brand new. Every quality. W rite for free samples artd remarkable prices. HARRIS BROS. COMPANY Dapt. BLI-184. Chicago, Ill. This Suit Is Yours for One Hour’s Work Wear ft, and when yonr friends admire H, orders t simply take their orders for one iike it or their choice from our large selection- In that way you can get all the clothes you want absolutely free. It's easy, for our suits have class sticking out all over them and sell like wildfire, and no wonder, for they are the niftiest, swellest, most up-to-date clothes you ever saw. Every one made to measure and guaranteed to fit. 24 hours’ examination allowed, find the lowest prices known. We Pay Expressage on Everything h Tou don’t have to invest a cent. We go the limit with our men. We furnish everything you need free in our Big, Complete Outfit F’ We take the risk. Tou will make good. Hundred# are now wearing the swellest suite inAown without costing them a cent. Tou can do it. Act Quick. 9<t Boty. Send Us 9 Pottr Simply write your name on a postal and send it today. The outfit and our grand offer will come to you by return mail. ' PARAGON TAILORING CO.. D.pt. 1105, CHtCACO SOLID COLD vg-J-; [Bings given for selling six 26c boxes MERIT Blood Tablets ahd returning $1.60 in 30 date. 1 solid gold, fiddreis MMDICINI CO. R 18 , Cincinnati, Okie. Northeast Georgia promises at no dis tant date to become one of the wealth iest and most important sections of the state. The reasons for this are n.ot far to seek. The elevation of the coun try over very considerable areas ap proximates 2,000 feet above sea level and upwards. This assures at the very outset a most delightful and excellent climate, affording favorable conditions for the production of a wide range of farm crops and fruits as well. The gen eral topography of northeast Georgia is most attractive. The elevations are such that protected locations for orch arding can easily be found, and as a matter of fact, it is a distinct advantage to have valleys lying at the foot of the varied eminences because this affords the best possible protection against frost.- Frost, as all know, is a constant nightmare to the fruit grower, but if hr can find a location where the air drainage is what it should be, then he is almost certain to produce a fair crop every year, and it is this fact which gives to north Georgia one of its pri mary advantages as an apple-growing section. * Another very great advantage found In the elevations characteristic of northeast Georgia is that while the days are warm, the nights are general ly cool. This favors the production Of an apple not only of high flavor and good keeping quality, but of fine color as well. Where one has an elevated table land or plateau on which to plant an orchard, the natural drainage is gener ally favorable, and the need of artificial tiling and its consequent expense may generally be obviated. In northeast Georgia the rainfall is generous and well distributed. Drouths are not com mon, and thus the fruit of the apple tree is afforded an abundant and uni form supply of moisture to enable it to mature to the best advantage. The land is quite uniform, more so in fact than in many other sections of the state. The soi\ fbr the moet part is a red loam with sufficient clay to make the top soil relatively easy to cultivate and of sufficient depth to be highly pro ductive. The subsoil is much like the top soil, although there is some gra-vel and silica present. The texture of the soil is suCh that it retains moisture advantageously, and yet yields up a fairly abundant supply of plant food for the growth of trees and the maturity of such fruit as they may bear. On ac count of the soils not having been so extensively cultivated, many of the best areas adapted for orchard purposes con tain a fair supply of humus. It is remarkable that a country known to produce apples of such fine quality for so many years should have been so long overlooked, but the tide of immi gration which came up the eastern slope of the Allegheny mountains seems to have overlooked the natural advantages of this section of the country and to have swept ever westward in the hope of obtaining more virgin soils and free homesteads from the bounty of the na tional government. Apples have been giown in northeast Georgia with con siderable success for many years. Mod ern methods of cultivation have only been adopted recently, however, and it is only in the last few years, compara tively speaking, that a the wonderful po tentialities of the soil for apple grow ing have come to be fully realized. Evea now the industry is in its infancy. The writer has had an opportunity to visit nearly all sections of the United States and Canada and is quite familiar with the better known apple-growing regions of this vast territory, and it is there fore possible to speak with some au thority of the natural advantages of the section under discussion and the fine opportunity it affords for investment in the immediate future. Certainly, this area enjoys many advantages which the so-called Hood river valley and other famous apple-growing sections of the west do not possess. First of all, apples of equal flavor and of as fine keeping quality and color can be produced in northern Geor gia as anywhere else on the continent. The natural conditions, as already cited, are all extremely favorable to Vhe pro duction of this fruit. The choicest of the varieties find here a natural home. Diseases are not a serious menace to the orchard industry, and those that are troublesome can be as easily and completely controlled here as elsewhere. Apples placed on an express car to night will be in the large consuming centers of the United States within twelve to twenty-four hours. The eleva tion is such that apples may be suc cessfully stored in properly constructed houses and placed on the market as needed. No section, therefore, enjoys greater advantages than northeast Geor gia. Among the varieties which do well here are the Yelow Transparent, Red Astrachan, Red June, Early Ripe, Duchess of Oldenburg, Wealthy, Rome, Beauty, Stamen’s Winesap, Winesap, Grimes’ Golden, Kinnard, Black Twig, 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 l^e 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, Ga. EAT CABBAGE, FISH, SAUSAGE, NEW BREAD “Pape’s Diapepsin” digests foods when stomach can’t. Cures indigestion Do some foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and can us^ a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s Dia pepsin digests everything, leaving noth ing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most Is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief some times—they are slow, but not sure. “Pape’s Diapepsin” is quick, positive and puts your stomach in a healthy con dition so the misery won’t come back. You feel different as soon as “Pape's Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes;—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch ing. no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fifty- cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indi gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach dis order.— (Advt.) Ben Davis, Fort’s Prize, Mammoth Twig, Stark’s Delicious, Jonathan, and Perry’s Winter. Few sections can produce so great a variety of apples in so fine per fection. Here is a great country and a great business industry which may be built up to the material advantage of the state* and the owners of the lands. The natural advantages of this coun try were forcibly called to the attention of the writer during a recent visit to the Habersham County fair at Clarkes- ville, where many of the varieties of apples enumerated above were oh ex hibit. This fair was organized through the co-operation of the Clarkesville board of trade and the Ninth District Ag ricultural school in charge of Prof. M. C. Gay. The fair wag a credit to the county and the community and shows that the people of this part of the state are fast coming to realize the splendid opportunities which their section af fords. Not only is this area well adapted to the production of apples, but to sweet and Irish potatoes and the raising of live stock. Many excellent samples of corn were on exhibition. In fact, some of the finest and whitest corn which the writer has seen in re cent years was shown at this fair. It was a pleasure to be permitted to speak, not only to the citizens of Habersham county, but * to the students of the Ninth District school as well. This intelligent and capable lot of boys and girls are filled with a com mendable ambition to excel and they will presently go out from this insti tution into the various walks of life and make a mark for themselves. Sev eral of the young men from this section who have come to the college of agri culture are making an enviable record, and one or two who have recently grad uated have returned to their home com munity to aid in its development. *ee CULTIVATING ALFALFA IN GEOR GIA. E. M. H., Thomson, (la., writes: I would like to know what has been your experi ence in the cultivation of lfalfa; also what do you know of the giant pod stock bean? We have had fairly good results from the cultivation of alfalfa on limited areas of land in the college demonstration field. This crop was cut five times dur ing the past summer, and where the land was limed, inoculated, subsoiled and thoroughly prepared, the yield was 6.48 tons per acre of cured hay. Where the soil was not inoculated the yield was 3.44 tons. This land was prepared for alfalfa by plowing under a crop of cowpeas and a crop of oats and vetch. Six tons of yard manure were applied to each of these crops making twelve tons In all in two years. A ton of caustic lime was ap plied and 500 pounds of a 10-3-4 fertilizer. 'a Lie seed was inoculated and was sown at the rate of twenty pounds per acre, American grown seed being used for this purpose. The seed was carefully dis tributed oveer the ground with a seeder and then worked in with a wheeled weea- er. The alfalfa looks very good at the present writing. Of c-urse, to maintain yields of this character very liberal fer- ailization will be necessary, and in order to secure a good stand ft will be necessa ry to prepare the land carefully. We think the use of lime and inoculating ma terial essential. We believe an abundant supply of vegetable matter must be in corporated through turning under green crops or the. use of yard manure. Nat urally, phosphorus and potash must be supplied in considerable quantities bo a crop which draws so freely on these par ticular elements. Alfalfa is best seeded early in the fall, and on lands which are not in the best physical condition, it can sometimes be sown in drills a foot apart to bettef advantage than broadcasted. Where this is done light surface cultva- tion may be followed and weeds anct grass kept in' check. We have not grown the bean to whicn you refer as a commercial proposition, and would not care to advise you defi nitely concerning 4 it as yet. We are in clined to think there are crops which promise more and which we know can be grown with certainty. We would advise the use of this bean only in a limited and experimental may until its value for the purpose in question has been fully and completely established. * * * A GOOD COTTON FORMULA. S. W. B., Besaea, Ga.. writes: I am thinking of using 00 pounds of fertilizer under tny next year’s cotton crop nd am going to use 200 pounds of 10-4 acid and 200 pounds of 10-2-4, and want to bed on 200 pounds and put 200 pounds in with the seed Which would giv* the best re sults in the bottom of the furrow? Personally, if only one application of nitrogen is to be made, we believe it would be preferable to put it on at the second application rather than at the first because the freezes of winter and the activities of baqterial life in the soil have probably transformed some of this element into a condition which will enable the plants to utilize it shortly after they start growth. We would prefer, however, to use some organic nitrogen in the ground at the first ap plication, and think you would not make a mistake in using a 10-2-4 at that time. Then on making the r second application, we would prefer to increase the nitrogen to 3 or even 4 per cent. Of course, when a complete fertilizer is used as a side application, it should be put on relatively early, and in that event we would be inclined to apply nitrogen both under the drill row or inside applications In an organic form since few forms or notrogen applied to the soil do not become available within a period of seventy to eighty days. This you Will s.ee should give the nitrogen ample time in which to serve the needs of a crop of cotton which has, rela tively speaking, a long growing period. * * * FINE GRASSES FOR HAY AND PASTURE. .. M. S. C., Dalton. Ga., writes: I would like some information concerning the growth of vetch in north Georgia. Is it too late to sow crimson clover? Will broom sedge make as good bay for the nutrition of live stock ns when grazed off? Would like Borne Information in regard to the vari ous grasses and clovers which may be used for hay. growth in the fall so you must not be disappointed if there is not much gicwth until the spring opens up. We think it late for planting crimson clover. Of course, in a good open sea son it will come along all right at times, but many stands are lost from deferring the seeding until this late date. Broom sedge when grazed so as to keep it young and tender is fairly nu tritious. The writer knows of some pastures which have been set in broom sedge and have been used for compara tively-long periods of time with suc cess. Of course, one would not place it in the same class as some of the native grasses, but where one has noth ing else and manages it properly, a con siderable amount of grazing may be obtained even from broom sedge. A number of native grasses may be grown with success in Georgia. In this class would be included Bermuda, red top, orchard grass, tall oat grass, tim- othey and pas pal um dilatatum. Omong the clovers would come Japan or Lespe- deza, bur, alsike, white and red. Crimson clover would not be siutable for a per manent pasture. These varieties of grasses and clovers do not vary mate rially in their nutritive qualities. Of course, some are better adapted for hay making than others and then all vary in their adaptability to certain soils and localities. Timothy and red top will do best on moist, low bottom lands; or chard grass under semi-arid conditions: Bermuda grass on open spaces. ’The clovers do best on soils either naturally or artificially supplied with lime. One can easily have good pastures in Geor gia for the production of hay or graz ing, and as we diversify our agriculture and increase our interest in live stock production, greater emphasis must be laid on the production of grasses for pasture and hay. * * • MANAGEMENT OF LAND DEVOID OF VEGETABLE MATTER. W. T. S., Greensboro, Ga., writes: I have some land that would be classed as a sandy loam with yellow clay foundation, and in wet seasons It is hard to get plants started to growing, and even wlien started the plants often sour and die. In hot weather the plant will parch up and the fruit drop off. The fellow clay In hot weather seems to get so hard that it is like cement, and cannot be plowed. Would like advice as to how to manage this land. Pancakes and no unpleasant “con sequences” when made with Cottolene Make your pancakes as you always do, using a tablespoonful of Cottolene (instead of butter) and an extra pinch of salt—or try this: PERFECT PANCAKES 1 1-4 cups flour; 1-3 teaspoon salt; 1 tablespoon sugar; 1 cup sour milk; 3-4 teaspoon soda; 1 egg. Sift flour, salt and sugar together; dissolve soda in sour milk and add gradually to the flour, beating smooth. Add well beaten egg. Bake on a hot, iron griddle, slightly greased with Cottolene. Let the cakes spread on griddle until quite thin. Cottolene makes all foods palatable and easily digested. It goes much farther than butter, lard or any other cooking fat and is more economical. Learn the facts about Cottolene in our excellent Recipe Book, HOME HELPS, written by five leading cookery authorities. Drop us a postal for YOUR copy—it’s FREE. • | THE N.K. FAlRBANKcoSSml CHICAGO One thing which is troubling: you in the management of your land is its de ficiency in vegetable matter, and this can only be overcome through dividing your farm up so as to institute a crop rotation system, and in certain years grow legumes during the summer and cover crops during the winter. This enables you to not only prevent erotion but to build up the plant food supply of your soil and to improve its physical and mechanical condition. Wc would advise on this land the use of at least one ton of pulverized rock per acre. It may be applied in the early spring to land intended for cotton and corn. If you can secure any leaves or compost put them on the land, or if you have yard manure so much the better. We would put frof two to five tons of com post under the drill row on every acre of this land. Use at the same time a plant food formula containing about 9 per dent of phosphoric acid, 3 per cent of nitrogen and 4 per cent of potash. Use this formula at the rate of 300 pounds when the crop is planted and 200 pounds as a side application thirty days to six Weeks after plant ing, depending a good deal on seasonal conditions and the growth made by the crop. The plowing and subsoiling of the land this fall would be advisable in the hope that you may break up the hard pan to which you refer. Now is a good time to do the work when the ground is comparatively dry. Subsoil ing should not be done in the spring or when the land is wet. * * * DISTEMPER IN DOGS. E. Z. B., Wallace, Ala., writes: I save a bird puppy about eight months old and she cannot walk any distance us she gets down in her back. Would like to know wbat to do for her. The Spring Trouble Makers Very often the first pests in the field In spring are the ones that are most to be feared. With many species of- destruc tive insects, the over-wintering individ uals come out with the first warm weath er and lay eggs for a host of destructive progeny later. One adult less in the fall may mean 500 descendants out of the way. Late plowing will do the work. It does not follow that it is always feasible or possible to fall plow all fields that have suffered from the ravages of insect pests. Weather conditions or the demands or crop rotation sometimes make it out ot the question. But if it can be done, there is a great deal to be gained by it. the slush and vmud, yet at their bed time, they demand a feather bed and a hot flatiron. it is quite likely that your deg is suffering from distemper which is a contagious catarrhal fever thought to be induced by a germ. Pure-bred pup pies are more subject to it than other classes of dogs. This trouble gener ally comes on with^ a chill followed by high fever and * generally a rash breaks out on the inside of the thighs, and often nervous symptoms are exhib ited, such as jerking of the head and twitching of the muscles. Constipation sometimes occurs and the animal is greatly prostrated. Medical treatment is of little value. All effort should be directed towards keeping the animal comfortable. Castor oil in half-ounce dos~s with two or three grains of boric acid should be given every six hours until the bowels are- moved. Follow with two-grain doses of quinine twice daily. If there is an accumulation of mucous about thte mouth, nose and eyes wash out with warm water three time* daily. Keep the eyes and nose greased with vaseline. Give the dog sweet milk, beef tea, raw eggs and gruels, and allow what cold water he wants to drink. Dried blood in one-half tea spoonful doses three times daily is helpful. Paralysis is often an accom paniment of this disease especially in the later stages. The quarters inhab ited by the dog should be thoroughly disinfected and exposed Jo the sun. If this treatment does not effect a cure, we can offer no other suggestions which are likely to be of service. Potato ruined by the Wire worm. FIFTH SON OF FAMILY MEETS VIOLENT DEATH (By Associated Press.) ELKINS, W. Ya., Nov. 20.—Continu ing a series of tragedies that already has resulted in the deaths of four sons of William Talbot, of St. George, Tucker county, Roy Talbot, twenty-four years old, died in his home last night from a gunshot wound in the heart acci dentally inflicted by his younger broth er, Blaine Talbot. The young men were hunting wild turkeys when Blaine fired the shot, having mistaken his brother for a turkey. Many pests may be subdued, partially at least, by this operation. The corn root louse is one of these. It is a tiny, soft- bodied, fragile creature and depends for its existence on the care given it by the little black or brown ants always found with it. Late plowing breaks up the nests of the ants at a time when they are slugglst and unable to gather to gether again. The colonies of lice, left without their keepers, can not survive the winter. Wireworms and white grubs spend the winter in the ground. The former are slender, cylindrical worms, yellowish or brownish in color, tough and wlry-look- ing. The latter are white and thick-bod ied with one end somewhat dark and swollen. Cutworms winter in the soil a« half-grown worms. Wireworms are also beneath the surface of the soil during the winter season. Grasshoppers are in the egg-shaped masses, an inch or so be low the surface. In the garden the squash borer is in a silk cocoon in tut*, soil. All of these and many other in sects, are disturbed by late plowing, bur ied deep or left upon the surface for birds to find or frosts to kill. FARM NOTES If all the cracks in the barns and sheds where your stock is have been well stopped up to keep out the wind and cold, when sitting before the front room stove this winter, your comfort will be all the greater. It is better to sow alfalfa late rather than early in the spring. .On well- prepared land not more than six pounds of good seed properly sown will be called for per acre. If the country boy knew fully about the discomfort and hardship which fills the life of the average city man, he could hardly be persuaded to go to the village after the mail. Rats cost the Missouri farmers 60 cents an acre, or $25,000,0.00, last year. Some folks are inconsistent. They will permit their stock to lie down in Hairy vetch can probably be sown even at this late date in north Georgia and pass through the winter all right. We would prefer to plant this crop much earlier, however, and when sown this late it should be put in with spe cial skill and care. The land should be well prepared and the vetch seeded either alone or with oats. Where oats are seeded use one bushel with twenty pounds of vetch seed. If the vetch is sown by itself, we think nearly a bushel of seed per acre must be used. In that event we would plant it l/i drills about twelve inches apart. The hairy vetch, as you probably know, makes very little New Times, New Things The old fertilizer formulas are giving way to the new. At everyfarmers’ meeting t one subject should be the fertilizer formula that will furnish a balanced ration to the crop and keep up the fertility of the soil. To do this the fertilizer should contain at least as much POTASH as Phosphoric Acid. Our note book has condensed facts essential in farmers’ meetings and plenty of space to record the new things that you hear. Let us send one to you before your Institute meets. A supply of these is furnished by request to every institute held in several states. We will be^glad to send a supply delivered free of charge to every Institute, Grange or Farmers Club Officer on request. It contains no advertising matter. German Kali Works, Inc., 42 Broadway, New York McCormick Block, Chicago. IH. Bank A Trnst Bldg., San null, Ga. Whitney Central Bank Bide., Nnr Orltant, la, Empire Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. 25 California St., San Francisco In these days the rural papers with their budget of good information are much better reading on a winter night than the old-fashioned mortgage which covered the farm. Just because bath rooms and running water in the house were luxuries in the time of your grandfathers, it does not excuse you for doing without them. They are necessities now-a-days Sunshine and sanitation go hand ir hand. It pays to buy a mell-made silo A poor one is expensive at any price. Cement fo# this purpose is worthy of consideration. One cannot afford to make a mistake in silo building. Leaves raked from the lawn may be piled in some corner and allowed to de cay. The leaf fnold thus formed is useful for potting plants or mixing with soil for seed-sowing. According to a report recently isued, the total value of our argicultural products in 1913, will be $.000*1)90,000, or $296,000,000 mote than 1912. It is claimed that, one thousand peo ple have lived from 100 to no years, and eighty have lived from IrO to Y20 years. If you fail to provide your winter’s wood now, just think of all the goo<l exercise you’ll get when the stormy days aye on you. AUCTION SALE 5,000 Acres of Rich, Black Land, Located Near Chula, Ga., and Known as J. H. Young’s Waterloo Farm, Subdivided into 50 and 100 Acre Tracts, To Be Sold at Public Auction on Nov. 28th and 29th This property is but a few miles north of Tifton and but three miles from the G. S. & F. and A. B: & A. Railroads. It is as fine soil as you’ll find in the State of Georgia. Fine chocolate pebble with rich clay subsoil. Good markets close at hand. Bumper crops arc assured. Free school located on the property. . Iv 1 Free Transportation On Nov. 26, 27 and 28 our agent will be at Ter minal Hotel (Union Station, Atlanta), where he will issue to you a FREE ticket to this excep tional sale. Big Barbecue, Band and Free Silver Souve nirs to Visitors Write for your ticket today. There will be a big crowd, big bargains and a big time for everybody. Carolina Development Co. SALES AGENTS GREENSBORO, N. C. So You Know That GEORGIA LAND Is the safest investment YOU can make? , / Has increased in value 154 per cent In the last ten years? Has the most productive soil in the South ? 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 Georgia Land and Securities Co. Citizens Trust Bldg., Savannah, Georgia