Newspaper Page Text
mm
; \ l I RI).
A Y, DECEM
BER2, 1922
Market'llews
By Associated Press Leased Wire
Yesterday’a Complete Market Report
ETS
IIAR SILVER I CHICAGO GRAIN
YORK.— Foreign bar sil- CHICAGO.—Wheat tended up-
; 1; Mexican dollars 49 3-8- ward Friday morning with trade
' l moderately active. The opening.
which ranged from 3-8 to l-2o
LIBER IY BONDS higher followed by a little roac-
YolSK Liberty bond* tlon and then by a fresh advance.
Corn after opening 1-8 to 5-8c up
sagged somewhat but soon rallied.
Oates started a shade to l-4ffl
3-8c higher.
Provisions were firmer with hogs
and grain.
1-J 1'
|.3S; first 4s
',.7,40; First 4 1-2:
VII-’: Third 98.46
'mailed Victory
)8.12
. THE ATHENS DAILY BANWER, ATHENS, GEORGIA
....
Miami hotel Wednesday, waa un
der indictment in the Richland
county court hero on charges of
disposing of automoinles'jnprtgag-
cd to a Lexington bank. He was
-under 43,000 bond, nis trial having
been postponed from last spring
to the present term of court. It
would have come up for trial witn
In the next few days.
locOtTI off
OB FACE F
AT CLOSE
NKW YORK STOCKS
I.AST SALE
\H11-1i Chi■inira! and Dye .. 73 j
Alii ■ ('li;iIn'it - 43
\ ltl , rii an i1 Sugar .. s. 38b I
A,,,,.,,ran 1 an 71
.1 ii..ri<7ih 1 ar .rid Foundry 182%
Ana l. Hide and Leather, pfil 65 !
Atmrir.m Inter. Corp .... 29
Ann 1 .ran I.ncomotive .*.... 120%
Ahicr. Smelting and Ref’g. . 53%
Aairra
Sumatra Tobacco
T. and T
Tobacco
Woolen
Anac u-ln Copper
Atfhl-MI
All.. Calf and W. Indies ....
Raidwin l.nconrdive xil ....
Ilsitinirtre ami Ohio .... .
RRblehSin Steel "B”
1 snadidn Pacific xd
75%
28%
123%
154 %
94%
49
101%
Wheat closed unsettled 3-4c net
lower to 3-8e gain. Corn closed un
settled at the same as Wednes
day s finish.
Open High Low Close
Wheat—
120 Vi 118% 11914
11H 116% 116%
109% 107%
ra.tra
Leather
34%
('Randier Motors
61%
fhr-otp
•ako and Ohio xd ..
. 67%
Chirac
>. Mil .-it r| St. 1’aul .
Chicair
, It. I. and Pac.
33%
Chin 1 *
24
Colorai
u Fuel and Iron
35
Corn 1
roducts
130%
Cnicibl
■ Steel
04%
Kii''
Fanu'ii
I’layers-Lasky
91%
(irncra
Asphalt
44%
Gcm*ra
Electric
182%
Motors
13%
(Imiiini
It To.
32
GriiU Northern, pfd
83%
Illinois
(’entral
108
Inspiration (’upper
35
Internath nal Harvester ....
100
[nt. Ife
. Marine, pfd.
49%
International Paper
51% l
Invim-ii
to Oil
14% i
Krllv-S
u'inirfield Tire .. .
43%
Kenner
tt Copper
Louisville and Nashville . .v
131!)
Mexicar
Petroleum
226
Miami
’upper
27%
SliiWIi'
States Oil
12%
Miilvai 1
Steel
29%
Missoni
Pacific
18
New Yi
rk Central..
97%
N V„
. 11. and Hartford ..
22%
Norfolk
and Western
113% |
Dec. ... 120
May ... 117
July ... 109 109% 107% 107%
Corn—
Dec 72% 72% 71% 71%
May 71% 71% 70% 70%
July ... 70% 70% 69% 69%
Oats—
Dec. .. 43 44% 43% 43%
May -- 43% 44 41% 43%
July ... 40% 40% 39% 39%
Lard—
Jany. .... 10.37 10.40 10.35 10-37
May 10.47 10.47 10.45 10.47
Ribs Jan. close 967
May close 965
Cash Wheal No. 2 hard 1.20@1.20
1-2. Corn N 1)2 mixed 73 1-4073
3-4. No 3 Yellow 72 l-2@74. Oats
No. 2 White 45 1-4 @45 3-4; No. 3
white 44@45. Hye No. 2 86 1-4;
Barley 660 73. Tlmothysced 6.00®
0.75; Cloversoed 15.00@20.00; Fork
nominal. Yard 11.75; Ribs 11.00®
12.00. i
CATTLE MARKET
CHICAGO—Hogs 46,000; 10 to 15
44% j cents higher; bulk 170 to 260 pound
8.3508.45; good and choice butch-
ehs 8.50; Butcher top 8.50; few
150 to ICO pound averages 8.55;
bulk sows 7.50@8.00; desirable
plgc 8.50@8.60; heavy hogs 8.25®
8.50; medium 8.3508.50; light 8.35
08.55: light light 8.40®8.55; pack
ing sows smooth 7.60®8.!0; rough
7.35@7.76; Killing pigs 8.45@8.60.
Cattle 11,000: heof steers and she
stock; early top yearlings fed with
show stock 13.50; uuk snort led
steers 8.50@0.50; bulls steady to
strong; veal calves strong to 25c
higher; Stockers und feeders
steady; Bull dcsirnbto veal calves
to puckers 0.0009.25; hulk stock-
Locai cotton showed a decline
at tile close Friday over the close
Wednesday nftergocn. Middling
grade was bringing 25 cents a
pound, and before the Thanksgiv
ing holiday, it was bringing 25 1-4
cents a pound.
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK.—The cotton Mar
ket opened steady at an advance
of 12 points to a decline of 2
points. There was scattered buy
ing on the relatively firm^showing
of Liverpool, and report of heavy
exports over the holiday. Talk of
a better tone in the spot market
was also an encouraging factor,
but there was only a slight de
mand and the circulation of a few
additional December notices prob
ably brought out some liquidation.
The initial advance was not fully
maintained with December selling
off from 25.40 to 25.26 and Janu
ary from 25.35 to 25.28 after the
call or back to about Wednesday’s
closing. , Private cables reported
that Lancashire spinners of Am
erican cotton had voted to continue
on the 35 hour per week schedule
instead of curtailing to 24 hours
per week.
The market got into something
of a deadlock. Mill takings of 408,
000 bales for the week against
421,000 a year ago did not give
cither side of the market any ad
vantage. In the trading up to
mid-session the decline amounted
to 8 to 9 points. January traded
as low as 24 79. Price movements
were unusually narrow.
No special feature developed
later, so far as reflected in the
local trading. Business, was quiet
with prices showing a tendency to
sag under liquidation and aggres
sive demand. January cased off
to 25.17 and March to -25.24 or
about 7 to 11 points net lower.
The market was dull and within a
point or two of these figures
around midday. •
The market remained very quiet
Leaders -in potties, industry and
labor are viewing With mixed
alarm and hope ttie ascendency of
new and powerful political factor*
abroad.
Will America feel the effects, ,n
some parallel movement, of tne
labor victory in England? Or o'
Faadlati success « Italy?
This is Prof. IrvOng Fisher s, not
ed political economist, first non
partisan discussion of this subject,
of its causes and effect, in Ameri-
!§ ... . .
A ■;r/,U44T-
money. That Is a higher percent
age than I would ascribe, but I be
lieve over 50 per cent would be a
conservative estimate.
And the worst of it is that neith
er labor nor capital has yet clear
ly seen the situation. Labor is
seeds, yields lor Just as good and
reliable send as we can Import.
Then the cabbage we import which
should be grown at home. Mrs.
Henry Comer, who wrote me that
she is growing on the river flats of
the Oconee in Greene county as
iL- V L .hi a me celery as is procured anywhere.
, °* n t ? e „ ra ?h pase r a n^ fTbere are many profitable crops In-
y tQ h .*. ne u!> e „ wr ™ f i digenous to this sections that our
man to the-lamppost, while capital j armer8 should cultivate and stop
i nos nothing except den )®“J j his Importation from abroad,
that nothing be done. When both I
sides demand and obtain stable LOCATION OF
money over half of their dlfficul- qlD HIGHWAY
ties will disappear.
Mr. C. M. Thompson asks that I
try and locate the federal highway
tut out prior to 1818 and a survey
made by Governor Early in 1818. 1
ca—The Editor,
By IRVING FISHER
Professor of Poloticai Economy,
Yale University.
NEW HAVEN. Conn.—A recent
circular sent to hankers and em
ployers expresses deep anxiety
over the Fascist! victory in Italy
and the gains of tne Labor I’a.Li
in England and elsewhere. It pre
diets that the same Idea of the poll
tical domination or labor will soon
appear explicitly In America and
will threaten the existing order.
I believe that hankers and em
ployers. not to say the rest of us.
have cause for anxiety. But -what
the circular overlooks is that, as
Roosevelt so often .warned us, the
; i only real escape from the danger of
L an overturn lies rtt redressing cal
grievances.
What is needed is to Interpret
the recent labor unrest as symp
toms of social diseases needing to
lie cured.
There are several such social dls
eases which I could name, and
probably several others which
would lie revealed by a searching
Investigation. But here I shall
point out only one—qirobably by
far the most Important. This Is
the unstable money growing out of
the war.
ers and feeders 6.oo@7.oo; bulk 'luring the middle of the after
siralile huuvy bologna bulls
@4.40. '
•iiiuep 14.00; fab lambs firm to
15c higher top 15.50 to city butch
ers; 15.25 to packers; fresh cllp-
if&fl 75 pounil fecl lambs 13.40 good
90 pound fed yearlings wethers 13,-
oo; feeders quiet; sheep steady.
POTATOES
CHICAGO — Sweet Potatoes
steady; Virglnit narrels mostly
2.25; North Carolina whites 1,254?
I 1.50; Tennessee Nancy llnlls 900
| 1.00.
Northern I’aeific
... OltlMpamH
Pacific Oil
Pan American Petroleum ..
Petipsylvama
People’s Cas
Pure Oil
Ray Consolidated Copper .,
Reading ..
Rep. Iron and Steel ...
Reyal Dutch, N. Y
.Sears Roebuck
Sinclair Cun. Oil
Southern Pacific /
Southern Railway
Standard Oil of N. .1. .....
Stuilebakcr Corporation ...
Tennessee Copper 8% river Ohfos 85@90.
Texas Co 46% '
Texas and Pacific 22%
Tobacco Products 80%
Transcontinental Oil * 12
Union Pacific 140%
United Retail Stores 71%
32% POTATO MARKET
89% I CHICAGO. — Potatoes steady
24 receipts 106 cars; Wisconsin sack- 1 of 5 to 11
196% led round whites
120% . 80@1.00; Minnesota
noon, but if anything, prices were
si shade steadier on covering with
January selling at 25.20 around 2
o’clock un 8 points net lower.
Prev.
Open High Low Close Close
Dee. 25.40 25.40 25.01 25.08 24.26
Jan. 25.35 25.35 25 04 25.06 25.28
Mar. 25.33 25.34 25.07 25.10 25.20
May 25.20 25.22 24.96 24.97 25.23
July 24.95 24.95 24.64 24.64 24.94
NEW ORLEANS COTTON-
NEW ORLF.ANS.—Reports of
export shipments of about 100,000
bales from three ports, put the
price of cotton higher on the
opening Friday but after advances
points, offerings
U. S. Ind. Alcoho 62
United States Rubber .... 51%
United States Steel 102%
Utah Copper 63%
Wcstinghouse Electric 60
YVillys Overland 5%
Atlantic Coast Line 112%
Uoca Cola 78%
Gulf States Steel 76
Seaboard Air Line 5%
Sloss.Shef Steel anil Iron .. 36b
United Fruit 153
Virginia Coro. Chcm 26%
American Zinc 15
Ri'.V'.nlds Tobocca-U 62%
~~T.ii,i.;; '
WALL STREET
NKW YORK. — Extension of
Wednesday's short covering move-
do. bulk ■ creased and the market reacted,
sacked Red j At the end of the first half hour
of business the tradjng positions
i were 7 to 8 points under the close
CHICAGO DAIRY ' of Wednesday. January sold up
CHICAGO. Ill. — Butter higher; , t0 2 4.<J9 and fell back to 24.80.
r aer> .! Xt . raa A* Selling was scattered and much of
50053; firsts 43 l-2@48 1-2; | j. aeem ed to be liquidat
standards 49 1-2; soconds 40041 thc | onf , aide
liquidation from
1-2.
Eggs unsettled;’ firsts 47 060;
ordinary firsts 40045; mlscollan
eous 45®48; refrigerator firsts 25
1-2026 1-2.
NEW YORK DAIRY
NEW Y’ORK—Butter easier;
creamery extras 53. Eggs steady;
Newv Jersey hennery whites un
canceled extras 80 to 82. Cheese
firm; Average run 27.
COTTON SEED OIL
NEW YORK—Cotton seed
ombined with some new j n -1 closed steady. Prime Bummer yel
vestment buying of high grade
shiii' s, imparted a strong tone to
low 9.65 lild; Prime crude 8.1
8.75. December 9.70; January 9.82.
,... r-:,i„„’- February 9.91; March 10.06, May
^he^lomand' 1 '^- 1
bra< oil virtually the entire
with cupper, rail, food and rail
slum's exhibiting the greatest
strength. Union Pacific was
pusii ,1 up i 1,2 and ’Frisco pfd.
"ne with large fractional gains bc-
m.K recorded by St. Paul, Erie,
fi'st pfd., Reading and Rock
Islam!. Houston Oil rosa 2 1-2
Penand Mexican Pete 2, with
mor " moderate gains among other
Poii’ilar shares in that group-
letro Lie Pasco led the advance in
" Pi " rs with a gain of 1 1-2
point-.. Some of the other indi
vidual strong spots were Adam*
Express, Stromberg "’Carburetor,
International Nickle, Coca Cola,
Amm an Cotton Oil pfd., and To-
nm\o Products all up l to 2 points,
••er.iral Asphalt yielded 1 1-4 on
l) r °fd inking and Scars Roebuck
“fop; id I 3-8. Foreign exchange
opened firm.
Tin. sustaining value of the
'm u interest was shown in the
udernoon when bidding for stock
*■' professional! sent the entire
up sharply. Pan-American.
Halit win. .'Marine pfd.. Standard
pi I of \'<nv Jersey, Sears Roebuck
■‘I" 1 sunHrh.iker. which - were aab-
i" ■ • "I to early pressure, moved up
■ c rousljr in common w)th the
*"i -ral HsL Usher body advanced
- points. Burns brothers A.
' and Continental Can 2, all
tm.diin. jio~- fr|gh n f ,ir»- Mexi-
'AMfelftK'nii gained 5 1-2 and a
•-atiilM-r of Other shares also were
'. .oti'd from one to 3 points over
A •dnesdajr'* final figures. - .
10.22; June 10.26; July 10.30. Total
list ( « a tes 10,700.
NEW YORK POULTRY
NEW YORK—Poultry alive high
er; fowls 13020; springs 18; roos
ters 12; turkeys 35; geese 20.
SUGAR MARKET
NEW YORK—Raw sugar un
changed at 5.78 for centrifugal.
Refined unchanged; fine granula
ted 7.10 to 7.26 .
NEW YORK POULTRY
NEW YORK—Ltxe poultry easy
fowls 17 to 24; roosters 16; tur
keys 45. Dressed poultry weak;
western chickens 23.to 40; tur
keys No. I fresh 51 to 60.
NAVAL 8TORES
SAVANNAH — Turpentine noth
ing done; last sale Nov. 27 at 1.45
Receipts 400 shipments 280. stock
12.512. llosln steady saleH 966 re-
cepits 2.703; shiuments 890; stock
109.610. Quote: B. D. E. F. 606 to
5.15; O. H. 6.01 1-2 to 6.17 1-2; I
6.10 to 617 1-2: K 5.15 1-2 to 5.25:
M. 5.40 to 6.57 1-2; W.O. 5.80 W.
W. 6.50.
Liquidation increased on the
long side imd later in thc session
prices were 17 to 19 points down,
January selling off to 24.69.
Prev.
Open High Low Close Closo
Dec. 24.93 24.94'24.65 24 63 24.82
Jan. 24.95 24.99 24.60 24.65 24 88
Mar. 25.00 25.01 24 65 24.6!) 24.92
May 21.84 24.84 24.52 24.53 24.79
July 24.63 24.63 24.33 24.33 24.58
LIVERPOOL COTTON
LIVERPOOL — Cotton spot
moderate .business: prices un
changed. Good middling 14.84; Ful
ly middling 14.79: Middling 11.71:
Low middling 14.44; Good ordinary
13.84 1 , ordinary 13.54. Sales 5.000'
bales. Including 3.900 American
Receipts 20,000 bales, including 3,-
200 American. Futures closed
quiet. December 14.13; January
14.03; March 13.83; May 13.67:
July 13.46; October 12.71.
Ga. R. R. Told
To Issue Stock
Washington—The Interestate
commerce commission authorized
the Georgia, ABUourn, Silvester
and Camilla railroad Friday to Is
sue $405,000 of capital stock, to be
sold at par. The corporation .which
has just been organized, will buy
the 5l-mile line t»omerly owned by
t'u* Hawkinsvilk* and Florida South
raifroad, extending from Ash-
butn to Camilla in Georgia.
The line which the i.ew company
wil operate was ordered abandoned
common carrier by the Han*
kinsville corporation's receiver, and
recently was sold at auction.
The new company from the sale
of its stock will acquire funds suf
ficient not only to buy the line,
the interstate commerce commis
sion's report said, but also to give
it working capacity for ^eratfng.
Plan to Save Funds
In Transportation
ATLANTA, Ga.—Plans to save
the railroads add shippers millions
of dollars In transportation losses
were discussed at a conference of
BURY BURNS
^ MIAMI. Fla.— 1 Th* body of Geo.
W. Burns, head of George W.
Burns company Inc; sales agent
for an automobile manufacturing | claim agents and other railroad of-
concern here, who took his own If/clals of the southeast at a meet-
jife Jn a local h<5tel Wednesday will ling which has just been held in At-
b* furled here Sunday. -^.-4 l lanta. More than half .a hundred of
—-— the leading claim agents of rall-
COLUMBIA. 9. C.—Geo. m W. ! roads In the southeast were in nt-
Burns who committed suicide in a jtendance. »i
unstable money
IS ROOT OF EVIL
But what ims unstable money to
do with recent labor unrest** We
do not remember seeing any men
tion of It In the newspapers. Yet
to find it we do not have to seek
far. We ^an trace our wav back
in three simple steps from the re
cent political demonstration of
labor discontent to unstable m<.ney
as a prime cause.
The Lrst step brings us to un
employment as the grievance
which, more than any other, caus
ed labor to make its recent i>oii!l-
cal commotion. The English labor
pre-election “manifesto” said,
among other things:
"Unemployment nnd low wages,
caused largely by the jwiicy of tno
Liberal and Unionist government,
have brought distress to tho bulk
of the working peopl?.'
Since the election In whicn labor
Cr'im? off second best, thj unem
ployed have been demanding a
l.H»**ing with Honar law.
LMrEftT IS
MIRRORED IN VOTE /
In other words, labor in England
held the Lloyd George government
responsible for the vast unemploy
menf during the last two years and
will hold tile Bonar Law govern
ment responsible for putting an
end to unemployment.
The opportunity to work is like
wise the demand of the Fuscisti in
Italy. In America also the buck
swing of thq last election is large
ly becuuse of the depression of
trade anti „ unemployment.
Next w*» traco back this depres
sion of tiude and unemployment,
whether in America, Englund.
Italy, or elsewhere, to the fall of
prices in 1020 and 1921. Always
nncTinevitably a great fall of prices
kills enterprise, closes factories.
dlHCour..;re8 termers and throne
men out of work.
Going still further back, we may
trace the fall of prices to the de
flation of credit and iftuney be-
ginnitig early In lor«l As Urofes
sor.Cusscl, of Sweden, shows so
clearly in his "Money and Foreign
Exchange After 1914," Just publish
ed, «nd as every other economist
knows so well, this restriction of
Credit which bankers/in so munv
countries begun in 1920 was thc
main reason for the fall of prices
which bankrupted thousands of
iarmors and business men and
made millions of workers idle.
CAUSES WORK
IN VICIOUS CIRCLE
And there you have it! The
chain of causes: Deflation, fall of
prices, unemployment, producing
polit cal vindlcativeness.
Whenever deflation or inflation
occurs somebody's toes are trod
on and discontent and unrest re
sult. First we complain over the
high cost of living und then over
th« depression of trade.
If those now so anxious over
labor tinrcsb for fear their own
pocketbooks will be injured, once
realized that there are those real
grievances from inflation,and deflu
tion (which are what “unstiblc
money” means) they would do
something else than wring their
hands in bewildered anxiety.
They would take meuusres to pre
vent inflation and deflation—that
is, to stabilize the purchasing pow
er of money. Incidentally this
would not only prevent the real
grievances mentioned but would
help their own |>o.Ketbooks.
INSTABILITY
CAUSES BOLSHEVISM
As stated at the outset, of
course, there are«other grievances.
But it is doubtful if any are tto im
itation as those produced by in
flation and deflation; Yord P*Ab-
ernon, now British nmbasador to
Germany and ohe ef the masters
of this subject, once said that he
believed 10 per cent of the world’s
bolshevism came from
ould be glad if any one knowing
the history or location of this high
way would write me about it. I have
ried to find some pointer about the
oad but can get nothing definite. It
is thought that the road passed
/ through Watkinsville and probably
By T. LARRY GANTT ran by Skull shoals, as that is the
in my rounds among the mer-t°Id home of Governor Early. The
chants, l noticed In the grocery ! first road laid out in this section
stores sacks and barrels of turnips, w 38 y i a - -Cherokee Corner and pass-
Inquirv elicited the information «d by the old home of the late M01-
tliat these turnips w'ere grown in decai* Edwards and O. H. Arnold, so
other states, some coming from Dr. r I*. D. Hutcheson told me. But
Canada, and brought across the this federal highway was of later
continent. They retail in Athens at date. The first road follows old In-
from 3 1-2 to 4 cents per pound-., dian trails, but in after years new
In passing the drug store of War- highways wen* mapped out by reg-
ren j. Smith and Co., they were ! «lar engineers. Try and refresh
giving out the cash prizes to farm- : your memory and let me hear from
ers in our section who had grown . you.
turnips from seed sold by them. 1
The first prize of $5 was w'on by VALUABLE ATHENS
W. B. Hammond, a farmer of Mad- ; INVENTION
ison county, who brought in three |
tiyrnips weighing 20 pdbnds each.
to farmers. It is named the “Uni
versal Backhand,” }Ir. Cooper has
received a number of letters from
leading farmers in this section who
have tried his patent and all highly
-recommend it. The best hooks are
used and whea you start your plow
•with one all troubles end.
Volcano In Italy
In Eruption, Said
LONDON—(By the ABaociatqd
Press)—The Volcano of Strombojl.^
on the island of that name off ft)|o |
coast of Solly is in eruption says
a news dispatch from Home F?i-
day.
Mr. Bob McWhorter, of the Grif-
The second prize of $3 was won by fitfi Implement Co., yesterday
W." T. Lester of Clarke, who had showed me a splendid invention for
three turnips weighing 19 1-2 farmers, patented by Mr. L. W.
pounds each. The third prize of $2 cooper in their employ and which
was won. J. W. Fowler, of Hoys- this company Is manufacturing on
ton. Ga., with three turnips weigh- an extensive scale and shipping all
ing 17 1-2 pounds esach. Other far- over the country. It is the fastening
mors brought in turnips weighing for a backhand, something used by
from 9 1-2 to 16 pounds. -all fanners. As every plowman
This set nie to thinking. Why do I knows, the hook that fastens tho
not our farmers supply the local j chain to the backband has been a
market with not only turnips but all source of endless trouble and ex-
- pense by wearing out, coming loose
and twisting around, rubbing the
skin from an animal’s sides.
Mr. Cooper’s invention obviates
all of these troubles. The hook that
connects tho trace-chain to the
backband is fastened by strips ,of
galvanized iron, riveted with cop
per brads, and farmers who have
tested this contrivance say it is
grand success. The strips of 1
Shop early and shop at|
Palmer’s." v ‘
State and County Taxc
arc now due.
W. A. MALLORY,
T.ix Collector.
Pans and Service
All Maizes of Ca
Conolly Motor t
Every Housi
Should Know These Facts
About Baking Powder
J—that a big can at a low cost many times results
bakings that are unfit for food.
that lack of proper leavening, strength means failure
and disappointment on bake-day.
—that one cent’s worth of inferior Baking Powder many
times ruins one dollar’s worth of other ingredients.
;—that millions depend on
Elieranomy BAKING POWOMB1
manner of produce now Imported
from abroad? Mr. Hammond
brought in a wagon load of turnips
anil found for them ready salo. And
there Is no crop That yields so
largely as turnips. And yet our far
mers will fight tho holl weevil to
grow cotton and lot our merchants
import turnips from distant Canada
when the freight costs more than
the expense of growing this vege
table at home. And no finer turnips ’metal are manufactured to order,
can he raised anywhere than and fastened to the backband by a 1
around Athens. Hero Is a big leak machine made for that purpose. Of i
that should be stopped. A merchant course that can bo used on any
tells me that It takes around one backhand, but the Griffith Implc-
million dollars to pay for the veg- I ment Co. Is using three of tho best j
otnhles. garden and field seeds and grades that they sell with this at- 1
other stuff sold every year In Ath- taehment for threo prices. vlz:’75|
ens. and which can lie grown at cents. $1 and $1.50. Tho Iattor Is for
home. He says just qpnsidcr the a solid leather backband that will j
enormous sum we pay to northwest . last generations of plowmen. It Is
growers for garden and field seed. Impossible for the hooks to over (
vhoh wo ought to save at home and 1 come loose or shift, ns they are
not only seed for our own planting hojd firmly in place by tho metal !
but for export. He says that any fastenings. This is a vory simple |
pluqt grown in this latitude that device hut one of inestimable value
not because of quanti
ty but on account of quali
ty—not because of price
but by reason of results.
That Is why the sale of
Calumet is 2X times
as much as that of
any other baking
powder.
Buy it—try it—never, fail
to use it.
A pound can of Calumet
contains fall 16 ounces.
Some baking powders
come in 12 ounce instead
of 16 ounce cant. Be
sure you get a pound
when you want it.
TOE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER.
When the Baby Laughs-
Y
OU are being advertised to. When the sun shines,
when the flowers bloom, when dinner sends out its
inviting aroma—when any one of a thousand things
happen to attract your attention, you are being advertised to.
The purpose of any advertisement is to attract your attention
and arouse your desire; to tell you wliat is new and good; to
guide you to something you ought to have; to make you hap
pier and more comfortable; to save you money and make life
easier for you. A • ,
So, read Herald advertisements. They will give you the later t
ideas and improvements. They will help you to live be'tj. i
and dress better at less cost. . - • ^ "v /
You’ll be surprised at the world of interest and the wealth of
new ideas that you’ll find in reading the advertisements in
The Herald. ✓ • '
Herald advertisements are daily records of progress. They
are the reports to you of,merchants and manufacturers who
work for you, telling what has been accomplished for your
benefit. Take advantage of them.
DON’T LET A DAY SLIP BY WITHOUT READING
HERALD ADVERTISEMENTS.